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Activities, Adaptation & Aging
Dignified and Purposeful Living for Older Adults
Volume 38, 2014 - Issue 4
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Articles

“We Get to Decide”: The Role of Collective Engagement in Counteracting Feelings of Confinement and Lack of Autonomy in Residential Care

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Pages 259-280 | Received 29 May 2013, Accepted 07 Dec 2013, Published online: 13 Dec 2014
 

Abstract

Maintenance of well-being is recognized as important for well-being in residential care, but the particular contribution that social groups and group activities make in this context is rarely considered. To understand how we can foster well-being in care, this study explores (a) older adults’ general experiences of life in long-term residential care and (b) their particular experiences of participation in this group intervention. Ten semi-structured interviews were conducted with long-term care home residents and interview transcripts were analyzed thematically. Thematic analysis revealed two overriding themes that illustrated participants’ general experiences of life in care. The first theme, “care home as home,” suggests that adjustment and positive social relations with carers play a role in enhancing well-being. The second theme, “being stuck,” describes a general sense of confinement and a lack of control associated with living in long-term care. The significance of collective engagement became evident in relation to this second theme. Specifically, participants’ involvement in the group activity considered here was experienced as making a positive contribution to building social relations with other residents and, in doing so, as reducing residents’ sense of confinement and lack of control. Engagement in the group intervention and the resulting positive social relationships were thus experienced as a means of counteracting participants’ sense of being stuck. Overall, the findings point to the importance of group activities in fostering older adults’ autonomy and control—and thus well-being—in care.

Notes

1. This negative cultural view was also in evidence in a recent BBC Panorama portrayal of systematic abuse in care home settings, which was followed by the collapse of one of the UK’s most prominent care home groups (see http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b011pwt6; http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-14102750).

Additional information

Funding

Work on this article was supported by a grant from the Economic and Social Research Council (RES-062-23-0135) awarded to the third author and a British Academy Small Grant (SG-52142) awarded to all three authors. The funding bodies were not involved in the study design; the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; nor in writing the report and submission of this article for publication.

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