Vitality of older adults through internal and external connectedness

Anneke G. Julien , Wendy P.J. den Elzen , Prof Ria Reis , Dorothea P. Touwen , Prof Jacobijn Gussekloo , Yvonne M. Drewes
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Abstract

Background

Vitality is a relatively unresearched concept and defined in existing literature either on the premise of one's functioning, or in terms of feeling alive. There is, however, little known about the significance of a sense of connectedness to life for vitality, especially from the perspective of older adults. This research aims to explore the association between the concept of connectedness and the perspective of vitality as a sense of aliveness, in order to formulate a theoretical understanding grounded in the subjective perceptions that older adults themselves hold of vitality.

Methods

Following a constructivist grounded theory approach and theoretical sampling, constant comparative analysis was performed on the transcripts of 15 semi-structured interviews, conducted in the Netherlands with older adults (mean age 73 years, eight females and seven males), regarding their vitality. Concurrently, empirical and theoretical findings were translated into a theoretical conceptualisation.

Results

According to the older participants, connecting to life itself enhanced their sense of vitality. This connection was achieved through internal connectedness (connecting to one's own life, intrinsic stimuli and intrinsic goals in an independent manner) and external connectedness (social connectedness, environmental connectedness, engagement with the external world). Furthermore, our findings revealed distinct interactions between internal and external connectedness and facilitating tools, such as freedom from physical constraints, financial freedom and adaptation.

Conclusions

Our findings provide a holistic concept of vitality and connectedness and consolidate existing perspectives on vitality into an overarching framework, which can contribute to the development of effective care policy, healthcare interventions and welfare services.

通过内外联系增强老年人的活力
背景活力是一个相对缺乏研究的概念,在现有文献中,活力的定义要么以人的机能为前提,要么以活着的感觉为前提。然而,人们对生命联系感对活力的意义知之甚少,尤其是从老年人的角度来看。本研究旨在探讨 "连通性 "这一概念与 "生命力 "作为一种 "活力 "的观点之间的关联,从而形成一种基于老年人自身对生命力的主观认识的理论理解。研究方法采用建构主义基础理论方法和理论取样,对在荷兰对老年人(平均年龄 73 岁,8 名女性和 7 名男性)进行的 15 次有关其生命力的半结构式访谈记录进行了持续比较分析。同时,将经验和理论发现转化为理论概念。这种联系是通过内部联系(以独立的方式与自己的生活、内在刺激和内在目标联系起来)和外部联系(社会联系、环境联系、与外部世界的接触)实现的。此外,我们的研究结果还揭示了内部和外部连通性与便利工具(如不受身体限制、财务自由和适应性)之间的独特互动关系。结论我们的研究结果提供了一个关于活力和连通性的整体概念,并将现有的关于活力的观点整合到一个总体框架中,这有助于制定有效的护理政策、医疗干预措施和福利服务。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Aging and health research
Aging and health research Clinical Neurology, Public Health and Health Policy, Geriatrics and Gerontology
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
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0
审稿时长
12 weeks
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