The loneliest continent: how an epidemic of social isolation hits Africans as western culture spreads

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A World Health Organization study challenges traditional views of African society. Some blame technology, others urbanisation and living costs, but what is the solution?

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Sarah Johnson

Sarah Johnson
Tue 12 Aug 2025 10.00 BST
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Loneliness has been a constant feature of Macyleen’s life since she was nine years old and her mother died in their home town in Zimbabwe. She was sent to live with her father, but he worked away from home a lot. His new wife resented his other children and was emotionally abusive.
Macyleen lived with three half-siblings, but they were much older. “We were there to survive and just get to the next day. I knew I was alone,” she recalls.

That feeling has never really left Macyleen, who is now 33, building a childminding business and bringing up four children on her own in Gqeberha (formerly Port Elizabeth), South Africa.
There are many people in Africa experiencing loneliness, like Macyleen. According to a report in June by the World Health Organization, Africa is the loneliest continent on Earth.
Almost a quarter (24%) of people there reported feeling lonely, and adolescents aged 13 to 17 are the worst affected, the WHO says. The next highest rates of loneliness are in the eastern Mediterranean (21%), followed by south-east Asia (18%). Europe has the lowest rate, at about 10%.
We have been globalising ourselves … we rejected the notion that there’s loneliness and isolation in the continent
Dr Cleopa Mailu
The report comes after the WHO declared loneliness a pressing “global public health concern” and launched an international commission on social connection to examine the problem.
Africa is traditionally viewed as having a collectivist culture that prioritises the needs and goals of the group as a whole over individuals. But this is changing.
Dr Cleopa Mailu, a member of the commission and a former Kenyan health minister, says: “My initial reaction [to the findings] was one of rejection.
“I live in Africa and tend to think the society we are today is the one of the 1950s or 60s, and that there’s more loneliness in the western hemisphere. I came to realise that feeling I had was just an internalisation of our past.”
Loneliness is not recognised as a problem in Africa, says Mailu, and people do not want to discuss it. Instead, social wellbeing has been neglected in health policies in favour of focusing on communicable and non-communicable diseases.
Meanwhile, cities on the continent are rapidly expanding; over the next three decades, Africa’s urban population will double, increasing from 700 million to 1.4 billion by 2050.
A mother with a baby tied to her back waits to cross a road
View image in fullscreen
A mother carries her daughter through a market in Anambra, Nigeria. Factors such as changes in society and the cost of living are exacerbating isolation. Photograph: Mosa’ab Elshamy/AP
“We never came alive to the fact that we have been globalising ourselves – living in conditions which are not traditional to the African people,” adds Mailu. “In a way, we rejected the notion that there’s loneliness and isolation in the continent.”
Mailu attributes higher levels of loneliness to a changing society, and growing urbanisation and globalisation, as well as new governance structures, migration, poverty and changing views of wealth and success.
“In traditional settings, wealth was defined differently,” says Mailu. “You just needed to have a cow and a farm or somewhere to cultivate. Everybody was the same level.
“Now there are different levels of poverty,” he says. “There is a lot of pressure and you find people are not together.”
Macyleen can identify with this. She says the Africa she grew up in is very different from the one she lives in today.
People are copying western culture, she says: “It’s all about me or my immediate people. Maybe that’s one of the reasons people are becoming more selfish.”
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If we don’t bring people together, we are doomed. We’re going to have a lot of problems beyond mental health
Lateefat Odunuga, psychologist
Macyleen finds it hard to open up to people, fearing judgment over being a single mother to children with different fathers, all of whom abandoned her. She also has little opportunity to socialise, given that she is trying to build her own business and bring up four children with no financial help.
“I struggle with stress and things are getting hard in South Africa. There’s a lot of xenophobia and I have this heavy feeling that I don’t belong here any more,” she says.
“If something happens, I have to be the mother and the father [to my children]. It gets really lonely, especially because I’m scared of dating. Who can I find to trust?
“The world is changing so fast,” she adds. “And there’s too much pressure to do well, but we are in an environment that is not helping us.”
Lateefat Odunuga, a psychologist and global adviser for the African Network of Youth Policy Experts, agrees that Africa is changing from a continent with many people in close-knit communities to one where that traditional way of life is being erased by urbanisation.
She says loneliness is a pressing issue for young people across the continent. “Young people are frustrated,” she says. “There’s a lot of unemployment, drug abuse, mental health issues. We’re seeing a lot of young people dying [by] suicide.”
An older lady sitting on a bench smiles and speaks to a woman with a small child strapped to her back.
View image in fullscreen
A Zimbabwean community health worker with the Friendship Bench Project welcomes a potential client in a suburb of Harare. Photograph: Cynthia R Matonhodze
The increased cost of living, she adds, means people would rather stay at home than spend money on cultural events, for example.
She blames technology for contributing to the problem. More people are using apps such as TikTok for entertainment and, through her practice in Nigeria, she has heard of individuals turning to ChatGPT to check if they are depressed, instead of talking to a family member, for example.

Sheba Khumalo, a grandmother health worker with the Friendship Bench project in Harare
Harare's park bench grandmas: 'I speak to them and feel a load is lifted off my heart'
Read more

While loneliness might not be recognised on a widespread basis in Africa, there are organisations dedicated to tackling it, she says. She cites Friendship Bench, an approach first developed in Zimbabwe that trains community health workers to provide basic cognitive behavioural therapy with an emphasis on activity scheduling and group support. The model has been replicated in countries throughout the world.
The WHO report highlighted the AgeWell peer-to-peer support programme in Cape Town. Older volunteers were trained to provide friendship and company to less able older residents in their community through regular home visits. South African participants reported less loneliness, and there was a significant increase in social participation.
“Depending on how committed we are to this work,” says Odunuga, “there might be a future for us to tackle social isolation and loneliness.
“But if we don’t bring people together,” she warns, “we are doomed. We’re going to have a lot of problems beyond mental health. It will be a disaster and a total shame to humanity.”
 

CopiousX

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I don't believe them. The world health organization has some shady plans for the African continent. They are the same ones forcing Africans to to accept GMOs and stop using native animal breeds and seeds, in favor of monsanto's crap claiming it's healthier and "sustainable". The last thing we need is the WHO to send their army of NGOs to start fiddling with the psychology of black populations in Africa.


I don't believe for a second that Africa has More loneliness than these East Asians like Korea or Japan. Simply because of the extended family. And in these East Asian societies it's common for a couple to grow old and have just one child or to have no children at all. They live isolated lives in apartment complexes far away from family , which is often in the countryside. (Countryside is relative here, for example gunma or Chiba is considered countryside in relation to Tokyo)
 
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Robbie3000

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I stopped reading when they said Europe has the lowest rate of loneliness and Africa and the Mediterranean were #1 and #2 respectively.

How are the two most extended family oriented regions in the world #1 and #2 while regions where people are not having kids like East Asia and Europe last?
 

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I don't believe them. In the world health organization has some shady plans for the African continent. The last thing we need is them to send their NGOs to start fiddling with the psychology of black populations in Africa.


I don't believe for a second that Africa has More loneliness than these East Asians like Korea or Japan. Simply because of the extended family. And in these East Asian societies it's common for a couple to grow old and have just one child or to have no children at all. They live isolated lives in apartment complexes far away from family , which is often in the countryside. (Countryside is relative here, for example gunma or China s s considered countryside in relation to Tokyo)
I was about to say, a lot of this seems like projection. Seems like predominantly CAC and Asian countries have these issues. From my own observations it seems like African, West Indian and Latin American countries/communities still value socializing.
 

African Peasant

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The loneliest continent?
Really?
:mjlol:

My relatives complain about A LOT of things, loneliness is not one of them

Most african can't even afford to live alone

You stuck with your fam, whether you like it or not:mjlol:

WHO did a survey? Congo does not even have a census to know how many people there are but WHO did a survey on the entire continent? :mjlol:


Of course, this will end up with a call to fund program and change mentalily:mjpls:

:camby:
 

African Peasant

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Because of the limited data, many assumptions and simplifications were made.
Data on loneliness have mainly been available for Europe and other high-income
countries.

So they admit having basically no data for Africa but they still end up with a magic result...

The Meta–Gallup Global State of Social Connections survey provided data on the
prevalence of loneliness in 142 countries. For 69 of the 153 countries included in this
report, that survey was the only available data source

Shyt is not serious at all and most likely a scam to push an agenda and ask for more funding
 
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ReasonableMatic

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I don't believe them. The world health organization has some shady plans for the African continent. They are the same ones forcing Africans to to accept GMOs and stop use native animal breeds and seeds, in favor of monsanto's crap claiming it's healthier and "sustainable". The last thing we need is the WHO to send their army of NGOs to start fiddling with the psychology of black populations in Africa.


I don't believe for a second that Africa has More loneliness than these East Asians like Korea or Japan. Simply because of the extended family. And in these East Asian societies it's common for a couple to grow old and have just one child or to have no children at all. They live isolated lives in apartment complexes far away from family , which is often in the countryside. (Countryside is relative here, for example gunma or Chiba is considered countryside in relation to Tokyo)



These are prime examples of fiddling with the psychology of Black populations of Africa - that ppl have been conditioned to be desensitized to.
 
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Still Benefited

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Glad yall seeing the okey doke.


These are the same people who convinced the world that Africa was riddled with AIDs and the face of it. When truth is malaria,or if youve ever had malaria can create a false positive with previous test(look it up,i only speak facts). Who knows how may have killed more africans with their early and probably experimental AIDS medications. Should be one of the biggest class action lawsuits in history,but its swept under the rug. Or people will call you a dummy or conspiracy theorist if you mention it.


And we cant forget the covid period. What WHO was saying,was not matching up with what people on the ground were saying as far as how deadly it was. Probably didnt want to alert the world to the power of melanin and its healing properties:respect:


And before im given warning points or bushed for misinformation,these are things you can feel free to look up or challenge jf you think im lying.
 
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ReasonableMatic

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Glad yall seeing the okey doke.


These are the same people who convinced the world that Africa was riddled with AIDs and the face of it. When truth is malaria,or if youve ever had malaria can create a false positive with previous test(look it up,i only speak facts)


And we cant forget the covid period. What WHO was saying, was not matching up with what people on the ground were saying as far as how deadly it was. Probably didnt want to alert the world to the power of melanin and its healing properties:respect:


And before im given warning points or bushed for misinformation,these are things you can feel free to look up or challenge jf you think im lying.







 

Still Benefited

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Ill do the research for those too lazy in the peanut gallery


"True, having malaria, especially a severe or acute infection, can cause a false-positive result on certain HIV tests. This occurs because malaria triggers a significant immune response, producing antibodies and other immune stimulation that can interfere with HIV screening tests, leading to a false positive result. It is crucial to perform confirmatory tests to confirm the accuracy of the initial result, especially in regions where both malaria and HIV are common. "




This is all from the same google AI overview.


"In parts of Africa, confirmatory testing for HIV has historically been limited or inconsistent, leading to false-positive diagnoses and serious consequences for patients. The issue is most pronounced in early infant diagnosis (EID) and is driven by factors such as the cost of advanced tests and challenges in implementation. However, global health recommendations and improved strategies are increasing the use of confirmatory testing. "




But keep believing and putting blind faith in the European to give proper black care. Medicine is geared towards the Europeans needs. You are secondary and guniea pigs. We are not the same due to melanin,but the science isnf specializing in accounting for those differences. You better have what the white man is having and hope it works:respect:
 

Still Benefited

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Having melanin but not understanding it is like having a gun without proper training. While its still helpful to have it can also be a curse.


Africans benefit soley from location and being outside more. Posting a bunch of g.m.o'd black people judging by their weight,doesnt deny what melanins properties are. To be clear melanin is far more than just a pigment that protects from UV,it exist within the body and internal organs as well:respect:


Heres a beginners course

 
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