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Loneliness From the Digital Mental Health Practitioners’ Perspective: Thematic Analysis of Semistructured Interviews

AI Summary
  • Practitioners distinguish social contact from meaningful connection, framing loneliness as lack of depth and reciprocity rather than mere frequency of interactions.
  • Loneliness arises from contextual causes: life transitions, stigmatized identities, and reduction of social resources, reflecting social exclusion and marginalisation.
  • Clients seldom name loneliness directly, using proxy language; severe mental health problems and loneliness form bidirectional cycles needing targeted therapeutic assessment.
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JMIR Form Res. 2026 Jul 7;10:e89798. doi: 10.2196/89798.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Loneliness is a prevalent concern across the United Kingdom. While validated scales exist to quantify the severity of loneliness across populations, there remains a gap in understanding how loneliness manifests and is addressed within therapeutic practice. Given the associated stigma surrounding loneliness, practitioner perspectives offer crucial insights into how clients express loneliness within digital therapeutic environments. These insights can inform more nuanced conceptualizations of loneliness.

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to gather the practitioners’ perspectives on loneliness within a digital therapeutic context and were defined as follows: (1) understand how practitioners identify loneliness concerns, (2) identify how loneliness is elicited in digital mental health interventions, and (3) identify co-occurring themes (such as grief, shame, and social disconnection) that signal loneliness concerns in client communications within digital therapeutic environments.

METHODS: Semistructured interviews were conducted with 9 practitioners. Participants included specialists in grief counseling, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer or questioning plus support; and digital mental health therapists. Interview transcripts were analyzed using thematic analysis, using an inductive, data-driven approach to allow themes to emerge from participant accounts rather than fitting data to preexisting theoretical frameworks.

RESULTS: The following four themes were identified: (1) Conceptualizing Loneliness: practitioners distinguished between social contact and meaningful connection; (2) Contextual Causes: loneliness emerged from life transitions, stigmatized identities, and resource reduction (eg, youth services closures and social support); (3) Expressions and Language: clients rarely expressed loneliness directly, instead using proxy terms, with disclosure patterns varying by age; and (4) Mental Health Co-occurrence: severe mental health conditions created bidirectional cycles of loneliness, exacerbated by symptoms of mental health difficulties. Practitioners reported that many clients experienced loneliness concerns, yet direct disclosure was absent across all participants’ experiences.

CONCLUSIONS: Practitioners identified multiple stigmatizing experiences as contextual drivers of loneliness, particularly demonstrating how loneliness emerges not only from individual experiences but from broader patterns of social exclusion and marginalization. For therapeutic practice, these insights suggest that practitioners can use awareness of stigmatizing experiences as potential indicators when assessing loneliness risk. The presence of contextual patterns was consistent across practitioners’ experiences, providing a foundation for developing more targeted interventions to address both the emotional experience of loneliness and the underlying social drivers.

PMID:42413079 | DOI:10.2196/89798

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