This female CEO is trying to defeat loneliness — and robots are part of her plan
Karen Dolva
Karen Dolva

No Isolation

  • Loneliness affects 20-40% of the entire population at some point.

  • Everyone from a four-year-old child to an 80-year-old in a care home can feel lonely.

  • Loneliness also has a negative impact on your health, causing stress, and even heart problems.

  • The burden of loneliness on the entire population is huge.

  • Karen Dolva, the CEO of No Isolation, is trying to combat this.

  • The company is tackling the loneliness of different demographics in innovative ways.

Imagine you're eight years old. You go to school every day, see your friends, and have lessons where you learn all the basics to set you on whatever path you eventually choose.

But imagine at eight years old you're also diagnosed with a debilitating condition, and you have to take months off school, without seeing your friends, missing out on all the different parts of school life.

Children are just one of the groups of people Karen Dolva is trying to help with her company No Isolation. People of all ages experience loneliness, from four year olds to the elderly in care homes, and there isn't a single way to help everyone at once.

"To us early adults in our 20s, 30s, and 40s, everything out there is basically made for us," Dolva told Business Insider.

"We started digging and we quite quickly found that's not the case for everyone else. We have these huge groups that are falling behind and dropping off, and these kids were only a fraction of that. Hence the company name 'No Isolation' — we want to help everyone who is socially isolated or lonely, and bridge the gap."

At No Isolation, Dolva and cofounders Marius Aabel and Matias Doyle are using technology to try and help people of all ages. Tech isn't the problem, Dolva said. It's definitely not to blame for why we are becoming more socially isolated than ever, as tech is only a tool.

"You wouldn't blame your washing machine for making you socially isolated, and that's a technology," she said. "We want to prove that tech is just what you make it out to be."

AV1 reading with friend
AV1 reading with friend

No Isolation

Children can live through a robot avatar

In order to help children, No Isolation built a robot called the AV1. By interviewing the children themselves, teachers, and hospital staff, they wanted to find out what happens when a child gets a serious diagnosis that will put them in hospital for a long time. Dolva spent three months mapping out this space.

As many children are bedbound when they're sick, they can't go over to friends' houses like they used to. The AV1 attempts to change all that.