The People Next Door – Really Do Matter!

On Saturday 28th of March, Sandstone Healthcare Yeerongpilly had stall at the Yeerongpilly Green markets. Come and say hello. We’d love to meet the people who make up the community we’re proud to be part of.
The timing felt right. Sunday 29th of March is Neighbour Day, Australia’s annual reminder to check in on the people around you. Good health starts with knowing your community. And a community only works when people actually know each other.
Loneliness is a health issue, not just a social one
Nearly one in three Australians report feeling lonely. That’s not a soft statistic. Loneliness is consistently linked to higher rates of depression, heart disease and cognitive decline. Australian research using national longitudinal data has found that social isolation measurably reduces quality of life in ways that show up clearly in health outcomes over time. Loneliness is recognised nationally as a significant health and well-being issue, with clear links to chronic disease and reduced quality of life.

The people most at risk are often the least visible. The older neighbour whose car hasn’t moved in a week. The new family who hasn’t quite found their feet yet. The person who seems fine but hasn’t had a proper conversation in days. These aren’t just social observations. They’re health signals worth paying attention to.

It’s also worth noting that loneliness doesn’t only affect older Australians. Younger adults, people who have recently moved, and those going through major life changes like giving birth or starting study are all at higher risk. It can happen to anyone, and it often goes unacknowledged precisely because it doesn’t look like an illness.
Connection doesn’t need to be complicated
Neighbour Day isn’t asking you to host a street party or knock on every door in your block. It’s a prompt to do something small. Wave properly instead of half-waving from the car. Drop in on someone you haven’t seen for a while. Invite a neighbour for a cup of tea.
A Queensland study published in Frontiers in Psychology found that connecting people with community activities and regular social contact produced meaningful improvements in loneliness, wellbeing and psychological distress over time. The ingredients weren’t complex. They were mostly just regular contact with other people. Something all of us can offer, without a referral or a waiting list.
If you’re not sure where to start, the Neighbour Day website has practical ideas for everything from a simple doorstep visit to organising something for your street. Small gestures tend to matter more than people expect.

What we believe at Sandstone Healthcare Yeerongpilly:
Health doesn’t begin and end in a consulting room. It lives in the streets, parks and community spaces around us. It depends on whether people feel seen and supported in their everyday lives, not just when something goes wrong.
At Sandstone Healthcare we take the time to find out what matters to you. That means understanding not just your medical history but the life you’re living around it. Who you have around you. Whether you’re connected or quietly isolated. These things shape your health in ways that a blood test won’t always show.
Yeerongpilly Green is a growing neighbourhood. The paths are walkable, the green spaces are well used, and the fortnightly markets are a good reminder that people here want to connect. We’re proud to be part of that.
We are better together.

Further Reading
- Ending Loneliness Together: Social Connection in Australia – the national picture on loneliness and what the research says about building connection.
- Neighbour Day Australia – what the day is about and how to get involved this Sunday 29 March.
- Healthdirect: Loneliness and your health – practical information on the health impacts of social isolation and how to address them.
- Queensland Government: Social Prescribing – how Queensland is connecting community participation to better health outcomes.
