Meanings and expressions of care and caring for elders in urban Namibian families:

Since Namibia’s Independence in 1990, the population of elders—persons 65 years old and older—in urban communities is growing steadily. As such, requests for home health care, health counselling, respite care and residential care for aging members of society are overwhelming nurses and the health ca...

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Main Authors: CJ Leuning, LF Small, A van Dyk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2000-09-01
Series:Curationis
Online Access:https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/711
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spelling doaj-dc41e18928274c84b5f24c69f71d08272020-11-24T21:42:14ZengAOSISCurationis0379-85772223-62792000-09-01233718010.4102/curationis.v23i3.711598Meanings and expressions of care and caring for elders in urban Namibian families:CJ Leuning0LF Small1A van Dyk2Augustana College, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, USADepartment of nursing University of NamibiaDepartment of nursing University of NamibiaSince Namibia’s Independence in 1990, the population of elders—persons 65 years old and older—in urban communities is growing steadily. As such, requests for home health care, health counselling, respite care and residential care for aging members of society are overwhelming nurses and the health care system. This study expands transcultural nursing knowledge by increasing understanding of generic (home-based) patterns of elder care that are practised and lived by urban Namibian families. Guided by Madeleine Leininger’s theory of culture care diversity and universality and the ethnonursing research method, emic (insider) meanings and expressions of care and caring for elders in selected urban households have been transposed into five substantive themes. The themes, which depict what caring for elders means to urban families, include: 1 nurturing the health of the family, 2 trusting in the benevolence of life as lived, 3 honouring one’s elders, 4 sustaining security and purpose for life amid uncertainty, and 5 living with rapidly changing cultural and social structures. These findings add a voice from the developing world to the evolving body of transcultural nursing knowledge. Synthesis of findings with professional care practices facilitates the creation of community-focussed models for provisioning culturally congruent nursing care to elders and their families in urban Namibia.https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/711
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author CJ Leuning
LF Small
A van Dyk
spellingShingle CJ Leuning
LF Small
A van Dyk
Meanings and expressions of care and caring for elders in urban Namibian families:
Curationis
author_facet CJ Leuning
LF Small
A van Dyk
author_sort CJ Leuning
title Meanings and expressions of care and caring for elders in urban Namibian families:
title_short Meanings and expressions of care and caring for elders in urban Namibian families:
title_full Meanings and expressions of care and caring for elders in urban Namibian families:
title_fullStr Meanings and expressions of care and caring for elders in urban Namibian families:
title_full_unstemmed Meanings and expressions of care and caring for elders in urban Namibian families:
title_sort meanings and expressions of care and caring for elders in urban namibian families:
publisher AOSIS
series Curationis
issn 0379-8577
2223-6279
publishDate 2000-09-01
description Since Namibia’s Independence in 1990, the population of elders—persons 65 years old and older—in urban communities is growing steadily. As such, requests for home health care, health counselling, respite care and residential care for aging members of society are overwhelming nurses and the health care system. This study expands transcultural nursing knowledge by increasing understanding of generic (home-based) patterns of elder care that are practised and lived by urban Namibian families. Guided by Madeleine Leininger’s theory of culture care diversity and universality and the ethnonursing research method, emic (insider) meanings and expressions of care and caring for elders in selected urban households have been transposed into five substantive themes. The themes, which depict what caring for elders means to urban families, include: 1 nurturing the health of the family, 2 trusting in the benevolence of life as lived, 3 honouring one’s elders, 4 sustaining security and purpose for life amid uncertainty, and 5 living with rapidly changing cultural and social structures. These findings add a voice from the developing world to the evolving body of transcultural nursing knowledge. Synthesis of findings with professional care practices facilitates the creation of community-focussed models for provisioning culturally congruent nursing care to elders and their families in urban Namibia.
url https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/711
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