ABSTRACT
Little research exists on the experience of older trauma survivors in long-term care settings. This study examined the experience of Holocaust survivors in community-based and facility-based long-term care. We wished to know if Holocaust survivors had a systematically different experience in such settings compared to persons without a trauma experience in their backgrounds. Through interviews with survivors, American-born Jews in the same settings, family members, and professional staff, we learned that there were differences in certain aspects of mental health and emotional well-being and that these differences are associated with the relative lack of a network of family members as compared to American-born Jews.
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