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Centre for Policy on Ageing | |
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Health capital in everyday life of the oldest old living in their own homes | Author(s) | Astrid Bergland, Ashild Slettebo |
Journal title | Ageing and Society, vol 35, no 10, November 2015 |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press, November 2015 |
Pages | pp 2156-2175 |
Source | journals.cambridge.org/aso |
Keywords | Older women ; Nonagenarians ; Living in the community ; Health [elderly] ; Qualitative Studies ; Norway. |
Annotation | As more people experience old age as a time of growth and productivity, more research is needed that explores how they master everyday life. This paper reports on a qualitative study that explored how ten older Norwegian women aged 90+ experience and cope with the challenges of everyday life with a salutogenic perspective. The findings suggest that health resources such as positive expectation, reflection and adaptation, function and active contribution, relations and home, contribute to the health capital of women. These health resources were of importance for the women's experience of comprehensibility, manageability and meaningfulness in daily life. Health capital is a meaningful concept for understanding coping in everyday life by older people. (RH). |
Accession Number | CPA-151009205 A |
Classmark | BD: BBR: K4: CC: 3DP: 76N |
Data © Centre for Policy on Ageing |
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...from the Ageinfo database published by Centre for Policy on Ageing. |
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