After the curbs of lockdown, many young people are finding themselves stuck at home again – raising fears over loneliness and mental health

When Beth thinks back to her pre-pandemic life, it feels almost unrecognisable. Between dinner parties, cinema trips, Sunday brunches and takeaways at friends’ houses, the 28-year-old NHS nurse from the east Midlands usually had a calendar brimming with plans. That changed starkly with Covid-19 but, just as restrictions eased up, the cost of living crisis began to bite. Beth’s finances have been so squeezed, she sees friends only once or twice a month.

Partly, this is down to the extra shifts Beth has taken to cover her rocketing energy bills and the £530-a-month mortgage on her one-bedroom flat, where she lives alone. But even when she isn’t working, she is often forced to turn down invitations, as socialising becomes increasingly unaffordable.

Some names have been changed.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Latvia is first country to reimpose lockdown in Europe’s new Covid wave

Baltic state once seen as coronavirus success story announces month of restrictions…

Fixed universal credit cuts are unlawful high court in UK rules

Victory for four re-housed former rough sleepers in Manchester left destitute after…

Joe Biden to arrive in Northern Ireland for four-day visit to island of Ireland – UK politics live

Latest updates: US president to land in Belfast on Tuesday evening to…