Optimizing healthy ageing in disadvantaged communities: insights into older people’s use of health and social care services

The European Year of Healthy Ageing recognizes that health care systems need to be improved and reorganized if services are to optimize the opportunities for people to stay healthy and well in their own homes for as long as possible. However, current services tend to be fragmented and insensitive to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Josephine Tetley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2012-09-01
Series:Nursing Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/nursing/article/view/551
id doaj-8f67c0d448014097b7e5633fa6ae9468
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8f67c0d448014097b7e5633fa6ae94682020-11-25T03:06:28ZengMDPI AGNursing Reports2039-439X2039-44032012-09-0121e11e1110.4081/nursrep.2012.e11335Optimizing healthy ageing in disadvantaged communities: insights into older people’s use of health and social care servicesJosephine Tetley0The Open University, Walton Hall, Milton KeynesThe European Year of Healthy Ageing recognizes that health care systems need to be improved and reorganized if services are to optimize the opportunities for people to stay healthy and well in their own homes for as long as possible. However, current services tend to be fragmented and insensitive to the needs of older people and their carers resulting in services being underused or refused leading to increased admissions into acute hospital care that could have been prevented. The main aim of the study reported in this paper was to identify the factors that affected older peoples’ decision and choice-making processes, when using or contemplating the use of care services. Using a constructivist methodology, this study used participant observation and 23 interviews in three study settings: an African Caribbean support service, day centers for people with memory and cognition problems and luncheon clubs for older people. An inductive analysis of the data revealed that when older community dwelling people found themselves struggling with certain aspects of their daily care needs; they used adapting, coping and seeking as strategies to manage. Additional issues of how well services were able to meet individual’s aspirations for care and support were identified through themes of match-mismatch, fair-unfair, independence-dependence. The findings reported in this study provide important insights as to how people’s needs are complex yet are negatively affected by rigid state controlled services that ultimately affect individual decisions to use or refuse services.http://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/nursing/article/view/551decision and choice making, older people, community services, healthy ageing.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Josephine Tetley
spellingShingle Josephine Tetley
Optimizing healthy ageing in disadvantaged communities: insights into older people’s use of health and social care services
Nursing Reports
decision and choice making, older people, community services, healthy ageing.
author_facet Josephine Tetley
author_sort Josephine Tetley
title Optimizing healthy ageing in disadvantaged communities: insights into older people’s use of health and social care services
title_short Optimizing healthy ageing in disadvantaged communities: insights into older people’s use of health and social care services
title_full Optimizing healthy ageing in disadvantaged communities: insights into older people’s use of health and social care services
title_fullStr Optimizing healthy ageing in disadvantaged communities: insights into older people’s use of health and social care services
title_full_unstemmed Optimizing healthy ageing in disadvantaged communities: insights into older people’s use of health and social care services
title_sort optimizing healthy ageing in disadvantaged communities: insights into older people’s use of health and social care services
publisher MDPI AG
series Nursing Reports
issn 2039-439X
2039-4403
publishDate 2012-09-01
description The European Year of Healthy Ageing recognizes that health care systems need to be improved and reorganized if services are to optimize the opportunities for people to stay healthy and well in their own homes for as long as possible. However, current services tend to be fragmented and insensitive to the needs of older people and their carers resulting in services being underused or refused leading to increased admissions into acute hospital care that could have been prevented. The main aim of the study reported in this paper was to identify the factors that affected older peoples’ decision and choice-making processes, when using or contemplating the use of care services. Using a constructivist methodology, this study used participant observation and 23 interviews in three study settings: an African Caribbean support service, day centers for people with memory and cognition problems and luncheon clubs for older people. An inductive analysis of the data revealed that when older community dwelling people found themselves struggling with certain aspects of their daily care needs; they used adapting, coping and seeking as strategies to manage. Additional issues of how well services were able to meet individual’s aspirations for care and support were identified through themes of match-mismatch, fair-unfair, independence-dependence. The findings reported in this study provide important insights as to how people’s needs are complex yet are negatively affected by rigid state controlled services that ultimately affect individual decisions to use or refuse services.
topic decision and choice making, older people, community services, healthy ageing.
url http://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/nursing/article/view/551
work_keys_str_mv AT josephinetetley optimizinghealthyageingindisadvantagedcommunitiesinsightsintoolderpeoplesuseofhealthandsocialcareservices
_version_ 1724673886320066560