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The significance and consequences of having painful and disabled joints in older age
 — co-existing accounts of normal and disrupted biographies
Author(s)Caroline Sanders, Jenny Donovan, Paul Dieppe
Journal titleSociology of Health & Illness, vol 24, no 2, March 2002
Pagespp 227-253
KeywordsArthritis ; Symptoms ; Chronic illness ; Physical disabilities ; Attitude.
AnnotationThis paper examines the meanings of symptoms for people with osteoarthritis. The study comprised 27 in-depth interviews with men and women aged between 51 and 91 years (median age = 76) and draws on previous sociological work about experiences of chronic illness, disability and ageing. In particular, the distinction proposed by Bury between 'meaning as significance' (the significance and connotations associated with illness) and 'meaning as consequence' (problems created for the individual by activity restriction and social disadvantage), provides a useful framework to examine the biographical aspects of symptoms. The authors found that older respondents portrayed their symptoms as a normal and integral part of their biography, but also talked about the highly disruptive impact of symptoms on their daily lives. The authors consider how these co-existing accounts of meaning make sense in the context of cultural connotations of ageing, and the implications for meeting health care needs of older people with osteoarthritis. (KJ/RH).
Accession NumberCPA-020416235 A
ClassmarkCLA: CT: CI: BN: DP

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