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Centre for Policy on Ageing | |
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Understanding dignity and care — an exploratory qualitative study on the views of older people of African and African-Caribbean descent | Author(s) | Roiyah Saltus, Elizabeth Folkes |
Journal title | Quality in Ageing and Older Adults, vol 14, no 1, 2013 |
Publisher | Emerald, 2013 |
Pages | pp 36-46 |
Source | www.emeraldinsight.com/qaoa.htm |
Keywords | Black African ; Black Caribbean ; Attitude ; Informal care ; Usage [services] ; Self esteem ; Qualitative Studies ; Wales. |
Annotation | The authors report on a qualitative study conducted in Wales to explore what dignity and care mean from the perspectives of men and women aged 50+ who self-identified as being either African-Caribbean, West Indian or Black Welsh (3rd or 4th generation, with links to Africa or the Caribbean). Community researchers and other members of the research team conducted semi-structured interviews with 21 participants recruited using purposive and snowball sampling. Dignity and respect for older people are revealed to be key aspects of the participants' personal value systems. The notion of care is understood as "caring about" and is seen to be a key indicator of dignity. Moreover, both care and dignity were understood and, for many of the participants, were both conceptualised on a personal basis and shaped by a sense of identity that was in part and to varying extents communally-mediated and rooted in a cultural collectivistic value orientation. The findings also reveal the intersections of care and minority ethnicity, and how - to varying extents - these intersections shape the participants' perceptions of how they are recognised and acknowledged in encounters where dignity is especially important, such as in the receiving of care. With these perceptions come various levels of engagement, avoidance or acceptance of the need for extra care or support. The study investigates the importance of paying attention to the impact that cultural and ethnic identity (and accompanying belief systems) may have on how notions of dignity and of care (both personal and communally mediated) are understood. It seeks to contribute to the body of evidence on ways of working with "seldom heard" groups, and the importance of building trust and establishing long-term, community-based research networks. (RH) |
Accession Number | CPA-170616222 A |
Classmark | TKF: TKG: DP: P6: QLD: DPA: 3DP: 9 |
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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