Dr Rahul Malhotra

Dr. Rahul Malhotra is the Executive Director of the Centre for Ageing Research and Education and Associate Professor of Health Services and Systems Research at the Duke-NUS Medical School, Singapore. The primary area of his research is ageing. Key projects that he has led/is leading include (1) nationally representative longitudinal surveys of older Singaporeans, studying predictors and outcomes of change in physical, psychological and social health of older adults, (2) longitudinal quantitative and qualitative studies of older Singaporean-family caregiver dyads, assessing patterns, correlates and consequences of changes in caregiving-related outcomes over time, and (3) a health services research project providing the evidence base for older person-centred prescription medication labels. He has published over 220 peer-reviewed papers in the medical, public health and social science literature. He received his basic and advanced medical training at the University of Delhi, India, and public health (MPH) training at Harvard University, USA.
Track Title: Loneliness and Social Isolation among Older Adults: Evidence
from Singapore
Date: 16 July 2025, Wednesday
Time: 2.35 PM
Breakout Session: Track 2 – Emerging Trends & Insights
Synopsis
Loneliness (a subjective state reflecting the perceived extent of the
lack of meaningful social relationships) and social isolation (an objective
state of having few social relationships or infrequent social contact)
are important psychosocial health states among older adults, both in of
themselves and as predictors of other adverse health outcomes. In this
talk, Dr. Malhotra will present empirical data from studies of older adults
conducted by the Centre for Ageing Research and Education (CARE) in Singapore
on the extent of and overlap between loneliness and social isolation, the
impact of loneliness and social isolation on two important population health
indicators (life expectancy and health expectancy), and the lived experience
of loneliness and social isolation and its implications for interventions
to address them.