Obama’s Surgeon General Says Coronavirus Could Cure the Loneliness Epidemic

Healthy relationships are as essential as vaccines and ventilators for our global recovery

Dr. Vivek Murthy
Forge

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Curtisha Bell and her aunt Vicky Blake show progress of their festive surgical masks to friends and family on video chat.
Photo: Santiago Mejia/The San Francisco Chronicle/Getty Images

You may have heard of America’s “loneliness epidemic.” I’m the doctor responsible for coining that phrase.

After observing isolation as a rising public health calamity during my term as the Surgeon General of the United States, appointed by President Barack Obama, I wrote a book about the importance of human connection, the hidden impact of loneliness on our health, and the social power of community. What I could not anticipate, however, was the unprecedented test that our global community would face, just as this book was going to press.

The Covid-19 pandemic has turned physical human contact into a potentially mortal threat. Parents like my wife, Alice, and I have canceled our children’s playdates; nursing homes have banned visits to the elderly, who are among those most at risk from this virus; and engaged couples have postponed long-planned wedding celebrations. So much of the socializing that we all took for granted is on hold: concerts, ball games, movies, meals with friends, office banter, and congregational worship.

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