Remote, Workers

Remote Workers Filling 50% More Antidepressant Prescriptions as Isolation Data Quantifies Loneliness Toll

08.06.2026 - 01:53:28 | boerse-global.de

Study of 600,000 Americans finds remote workers face 50% more antidepressant use and 22% more depressive episodes. Isolation key driver, but exercise boosts mood; experts warn against blanket return-to-office mandates.

Work-from-Home Mental Health: Antidepressant Prescriptions Jump 50%
Remote - Remote Workers Filling 50% More Antidepressant Prescriptions as Isolation Data Quantifies Loneliness Toll 08.06.2026 - Bild: über boerse-global.de

Prescriptions for antidepressants and anti-anxiety medications have surged by roughly 50% among Americans who work from home, according to a large-scale study published June?4 in the journal Science. For employees living alone, the increase is more than double that rate.

Researchers analyzed data from nearly 600,000 U.S. citizens spanning 2011 to 2024. On average, remote workers spend an extra 1.1 hours alone each workday compared to their office-based peers. The probability of going an entire workday without any human contact rises by 72%.

Among singles, the odds of a completely solitary workday soar by 83%. In one-person households, 84% of remote work days involve no face-to-face interaction. For office workers in similar living situations, that figure drops to 23%. The mental health deterioration among singles is twice as severe as the average remote worker. Use of psychiatric services is 4.6 percentage points higher among work-from-home employees overall.

On the Kessler?6 scale — a standard measure of psychological distress — remote workers registered a 0.1 standard deviation increase. The authors estimate that roughly one-third of the overall rise in mental health problems in the United States since the pandemic can be attributed to the shift toward mobile work. Remote workers also reported 22% more depressive episodes.

A separate study published June?6 in Nature Human Behaviour offers a counterweight. Researchers from Salzburg, Bochum, Karlsruhe, and Mannheim examined 67 studies involving more than 8,000 participants. Their conclusion: regular physical activity boosts mood and energy, especially among people with low baseline well-being.

Nico?Dragano of the University Hospital Düsseldorf cautioned against blanket return-to-office mandates. “It’s not home office itself that’s the problem, but how it’s structured,” he said. He recommended coordinated hybrid days or subsidies for coworking spaces as ways to reduce isolation.

Microsoft plans to roll out a Teams feature in June that tracks employees’ work hours and location across corporate networks. Companies could use the data to schedule in-person days and deliberately foster social contact.

In Germany, between 24% and 25% of employed people currently work from home at least occasionally. The debate over balancing flexibility with social connection shows no sign of fading.

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