Aging Partners Managing Chronic Illness Together: Introducing the Content Collection

Prior literature on illness management within intimate relationships demonstrates a variety of benefits from supportive partnership. Indeed, much of the earliest research in this field engaged older adults with and without chronic conditions. However, this pioneering literature gave little considera...

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Main Authors: Alexandra C. H. Nowakowski PhD, MPH, J. E. Sumerau PhD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-10-01
Series:Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2333721417737679
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spelling doaj-ad87ee48ac164bda99a4969a4f98b9132020-11-25T03:00:08ZengSAGE PublishingGerontology and Geriatric Medicine2333-72142017-10-01310.1177/2333721417737679Aging Partners Managing Chronic Illness Together: Introducing the Content CollectionAlexandra C. H. Nowakowski PhD, MPH0J. E. Sumerau PhD1Florida State University, FL, USAUniversity of Tampa, FL, USAPrior literature on illness management within intimate relationships demonstrates a variety of benefits from supportive partnership. Indeed, much of the earliest research in this field engaged older adults with and without chronic conditions. However, this pioneering literature gave little consideration to relationships in which multiple partners were coping with chronic illness. By contrast, the majority of published manuscripts presented a “sick partner/well partner” model in which caregiving flowed only in one direction. Yet this idea makes little sense in the context of contemporaneous data on population aging and health as a majority of older adults now live with at least one chronic condition. Scholars still have not delved explicitly into the experiences of the vast population of older relationship partners who are managing chronic conditions simultaneously. We thus welcome Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine readers to this special content collection on Aging Partners Managing Chronic Illness Together .https://doi.org/10.1177/2333721417737679
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexandra C. H. Nowakowski PhD, MPH
J. E. Sumerau PhD
spellingShingle Alexandra C. H. Nowakowski PhD, MPH
J. E. Sumerau PhD
Aging Partners Managing Chronic Illness Together: Introducing the Content Collection
Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine
author_facet Alexandra C. H. Nowakowski PhD, MPH
J. E. Sumerau PhD
author_sort Alexandra C. H. Nowakowski PhD, MPH
title Aging Partners Managing Chronic Illness Together: Introducing the Content Collection
title_short Aging Partners Managing Chronic Illness Together: Introducing the Content Collection
title_full Aging Partners Managing Chronic Illness Together: Introducing the Content Collection
title_fullStr Aging Partners Managing Chronic Illness Together: Introducing the Content Collection
title_full_unstemmed Aging Partners Managing Chronic Illness Together: Introducing the Content Collection
title_sort aging partners managing chronic illness together: introducing the content collection
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine
issn 2333-7214
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Prior literature on illness management within intimate relationships demonstrates a variety of benefits from supportive partnership. Indeed, much of the earliest research in this field engaged older adults with and without chronic conditions. However, this pioneering literature gave little consideration to relationships in which multiple partners were coping with chronic illness. By contrast, the majority of published manuscripts presented a “sick partner/well partner” model in which caregiving flowed only in one direction. Yet this idea makes little sense in the context of contemporaneous data on population aging and health as a majority of older adults now live with at least one chronic condition. Scholars still have not delved explicitly into the experiences of the vast population of older relationship partners who are managing chronic conditions simultaneously. We thus welcome Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine readers to this special content collection on Aging Partners Managing Chronic Illness Together .
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2333721417737679
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