(De)Gendering Older Patients: Exploring Views on Aging and Older Patients in Romanian General Practitioners

 Abstract. Purpose: Demographic changes make it necessary to improve communication with older patients and design gender sensitive health promotion. The present article aimed to explore how general practitioners see old age and what role gender may play in their representations of aging. It also lo...

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Main Author: Catrinel Craciun
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de Costa Rica 2016-12-01
Series:Actualidades en Psicología
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/actualidades/article/view/24069
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spelling doaj-ecea7a27126a4071979feedcca840c6c2020-11-24T22:18:13ZspaUniversidad de Costa RicaActualidades en Psicología0258-64442215-35352016-12-013012110.15517/ap.v30i121.24069(De)Gendering Older Patients: Exploring Views on Aging and Older Patients in Romanian General PractitionersCatrinel Craciun0Freie Universität Berlin, Germany Babes Bolyai University, Cluj Napoca, Romania  Abstract. Purpose: Demographic changes make it necessary to improve communication with older patients and design gender sensitive health promotion. The present article aimed to explore how general practitioners see old age and what role gender may play in their representations of aging. It also looked whether the gender of the older patients played a role for how general practitioners treated them. Methods: Episodic interviews were conducted with 17 women and 17 men who worked as general practitioners in Romania. Thematic coding was used to analyze data. Results: Findings showed that general practitioners saw old age as negative no matter their gender. Older patients were perceived as difficult and mostly older women were given as negative examples to illustrate treatment non-adherence and psychological or social problems related to aging. Conclusion: Negative aging views combined with a (de)gendering of aging patients may lead to maintain negative aging stereotypes and gender inequality in old age. Implications for preventing this from happening are discussed     http://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/actualidades/article/view/24069aging viewsactive aginggeneral practitionersgenderolder patients
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catrinel Craciun
spellingShingle Catrinel Craciun
(De)Gendering Older Patients: Exploring Views on Aging and Older Patients in Romanian General Practitioners
Actualidades en Psicología
aging views
active aging
general practitioners
gender
older patients
author_facet Catrinel Craciun
author_sort Catrinel Craciun
title (De)Gendering Older Patients: Exploring Views on Aging and Older Patients in Romanian General Practitioners
title_short (De)Gendering Older Patients: Exploring Views on Aging and Older Patients in Romanian General Practitioners
title_full (De)Gendering Older Patients: Exploring Views on Aging and Older Patients in Romanian General Practitioners
title_fullStr (De)Gendering Older Patients: Exploring Views on Aging and Older Patients in Romanian General Practitioners
title_full_unstemmed (De)Gendering Older Patients: Exploring Views on Aging and Older Patients in Romanian General Practitioners
title_sort (de)gendering older patients: exploring views on aging and older patients in romanian general practitioners
publisher Universidad de Costa Rica
series Actualidades en Psicología
issn 0258-6444
2215-3535
publishDate 2016-12-01
description  Abstract. Purpose: Demographic changes make it necessary to improve communication with older patients and design gender sensitive health promotion. The present article aimed to explore how general practitioners see old age and what role gender may play in their representations of aging. It also looked whether the gender of the older patients played a role for how general practitioners treated them. Methods: Episodic interviews were conducted with 17 women and 17 men who worked as general practitioners in Romania. Thematic coding was used to analyze data. Results: Findings showed that general practitioners saw old age as negative no matter their gender. Older patients were perceived as difficult and mostly older women were given as negative examples to illustrate treatment non-adherence and psychological or social problems related to aging. Conclusion: Negative aging views combined with a (de)gendering of aging patients may lead to maintain negative aging stereotypes and gender inequality in old age. Implications for preventing this from happening are discussed    
topic aging views
active aging
general practitioners
gender
older patients
url http://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/actualidades/article/view/24069
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