最后的栖息地:居住护理机构的生活和死亡

Benyamin Schwarz, R. Molnar, J. Benson, R. Tofle
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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要这篇文章是关于死亡地点的一项更大研究的一部分。通过叙事分析方法,我们努力获得对机构环境中死亡经历的丰富描述和独特描述,主要是在养老院。物质环境的质量可能会阻碍或大大提高残疾老年人留在自己家中的程度。大部分长期护理由家庭成员提供。然而,随着受护理者的病情恶化和护理者的压力水平增加,用正式护理资源补充非正式护理的需求也在增加。因此,体弱的老年人可能会被转移到寄宿护理机构。在其他情况下,他们可能会从医院出院到这些机构。疗养院被认为是体弱的老年人的最后选择。尽管试图通过“文化变革”来改善长期护理环境,但许多关于疗养院经历的文献的首要主题是拒绝、失落,在一些极端的说法中,“双重埋葬”将搬迁到疗养院等同于一个人生命的最后终点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Last Habitat: Living and Dying in Residential Care Facility
Abstract This article is a part of a larger study regarding the place of dying. Through narrative analysis methods, we strived to obtain rich descriptions and idiosyncratic accounts of the experience of dying in institutional settings, predominately in the nursing home. The quality of the physical environment can impede or greatly enhance the extent to which a disabled older person can remain in his or her own home. Most of long-term care is provided by family members. However, as the condition of the care recipient deteriorates and the stress level of the caregiver increases, the need to supplement the informal care with formal care resources grows. Consequently, frail older adults may be relocated to a residential care facility. In other cases they may be discharged from a hospital to these institutional settings. Nursing homes are considered the last resort for frail, old people. Despite attempts to improve the environment of long-term care settings through “cultural change,” the overriding theme of much of the literature about the nursing home experience is one of rejection, loss, and in some extreme accounts, a “double burial” that equates relocation to a nursing home with a person’s final terminus of life.
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: Housing is more than houses-it is the foundation upon which the essentials of life are anchored. The quality of housing can enhance or diminish the well-being of individuals and families as well as that of the entire community. Before the Journal of Housing for the Elderly, housing for the elderly as a subject area has a relatively brief history. The Journal of Housing for the Elderly aims to serve the needs of gerontological professionals in the fields of architecture and housing, urban planning, and public policy who are responsible for the residential environments of the elderly in the community.
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