The impact of social network change and health decline: a qualitative study on experiences of older adults who are ageing in place

Abstract Background Older adults prefer to age in place. Social network change and health decline challenge ageing in place, as stressors that make age-related advantages disappear. The aim of this study was to explore social network change and health decline and its impact on older adults who are a...

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Main Authors: Willeke Vos-den Ouden, Leonieke van Boekel, Meriam Janssen, Roger Leenders, Katrien Luijkx
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-09-01
Series:BMC Geriatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-021-02385-6
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spelling doaj-26db7e7477514598a097ac1e562565382021-09-05T11:19:40ZengBMCBMC Geriatrics1471-23182021-09-0121111310.1186/s12877-021-02385-6The impact of social network change and health decline: a qualitative study on experiences of older adults who are ageing in placeWilleke Vos-den Ouden0Leonieke van Boekel1Meriam Janssen2Roger Leenders3Katrien Luijkx4Department Tranzo, Tilburg University, Tilburg School of Social and Behavioral SciencesDepartment Tranzo, Tilburg University, Tilburg School of Social and Behavioral SciencesDepartment Tranzo, Tilburg University, Tilburg School of Social and Behavioral SciencesDepartment Organization Studies, Tilburg University, Tilburg School of Social and Behavioral SciencesDepartment Tranzo, Tilburg University, Tilburg School of Social and Behavioral SciencesAbstract Background Older adults prefer to age in place. Social network change and health decline challenge ageing in place, as stressors that make age-related advantages disappear. The aim of this study was to explore social network change and health decline and its impact on older adults who are ageing in place. Method In-depth interviews (n = 16) were conducted with older adults who were ageing in place and who were experiencing health decline and social network change. Procedures for grounded theory building were followed to analyse the interviews with respondents who were discharged from the hospital less than 4 months ago (n = 7). Narrative analysis was conducted to reach a deeper understanding of the expected complexity of experiences of this targeted sample. Results Results encompass a typology with four types of impact: A. Sneak preview of old age, B. Disruptive transition into old age, C. Drastically ageing, and D. Steadily ageing. Additionally, indications were found that older adults should be able to move along the four types of impact and ideally could end up in quartile D, experiencing little or no impact at all (anymore). Conclusion The results present an optimistic view on the possibilities of older adults to continue ageing in place despite experiencing unavoidable and uncontrollable stressors in life. Also, the results provide leads for practice, to develop an action perspective for home care nurses and gerontological social workers to determine and reduce the impact of social network change and health decline on older adults who are ageing in place. Suggestions for further research would be to unravel how to detect temporal setbacks in successful ageing in place.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-021-02385-6Social network changeImpactExperiencesAgeing in place
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Willeke Vos-den Ouden
Leonieke van Boekel
Meriam Janssen
Roger Leenders
Katrien Luijkx
spellingShingle Willeke Vos-den Ouden
Leonieke van Boekel
Meriam Janssen
Roger Leenders
Katrien Luijkx
The impact of social network change and health decline: a qualitative study on experiences of older adults who are ageing in place
BMC Geriatrics
Social network change
Impact
Experiences
Ageing in place
author_facet Willeke Vos-den Ouden
Leonieke van Boekel
Meriam Janssen
Roger Leenders
Katrien Luijkx
author_sort Willeke Vos-den Ouden
title The impact of social network change and health decline: a qualitative study on experiences of older adults who are ageing in place
title_short The impact of social network change and health decline: a qualitative study on experiences of older adults who are ageing in place
title_full The impact of social network change and health decline: a qualitative study on experiences of older adults who are ageing in place
title_fullStr The impact of social network change and health decline: a qualitative study on experiences of older adults who are ageing in place
title_full_unstemmed The impact of social network change and health decline: a qualitative study on experiences of older adults who are ageing in place
title_sort impact of social network change and health decline: a qualitative study on experiences of older adults who are ageing in place
publisher BMC
series BMC Geriatrics
issn 1471-2318
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Background Older adults prefer to age in place. Social network change and health decline challenge ageing in place, as stressors that make age-related advantages disappear. The aim of this study was to explore social network change and health decline and its impact on older adults who are ageing in place. Method In-depth interviews (n = 16) were conducted with older adults who were ageing in place and who were experiencing health decline and social network change. Procedures for grounded theory building were followed to analyse the interviews with respondents who were discharged from the hospital less than 4 months ago (n = 7). Narrative analysis was conducted to reach a deeper understanding of the expected complexity of experiences of this targeted sample. Results Results encompass a typology with four types of impact: A. Sneak preview of old age, B. Disruptive transition into old age, C. Drastically ageing, and D. Steadily ageing. Additionally, indications were found that older adults should be able to move along the four types of impact and ideally could end up in quartile D, experiencing little or no impact at all (anymore). Conclusion The results present an optimistic view on the possibilities of older adults to continue ageing in place despite experiencing unavoidable and uncontrollable stressors in life. Also, the results provide leads for practice, to develop an action perspective for home care nurses and gerontological social workers to determine and reduce the impact of social network change and health decline on older adults who are ageing in place. Suggestions for further research would be to unravel how to detect temporal setbacks in successful ageing in place.
topic Social network change
Impact
Experiences
Ageing in place
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-021-02385-6
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