The Social Construction of Stigma in Aged-Care Work: Implications for Health Professionals’ Work Intentions

Author:

Manchha Asmita V1ORCID,Way Kïrsten A1,Tann Ken2,Thai Michael1

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, The University of Queensland , Brisbane, Queensland , Australia

2. The University of Queensland Business School , Brisbane, Queensland , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Background and Objectives Although society has cultivated a deeper appreciation for essential health services, societal discourses reinforce a stigma of working in aged care. Drawing on dirty work and Stigma Theory, this study aims to investigate stigma in the context of recruiting health professionals. Research Design and Methods We employed a mixed-methods design to examine the nature and implications of the stigma of working in aged care. A path analysis was used to test whether health professionals’ (n = 159) negative perceptions of aged-care work would negatively predict their willingness to work in aged care. A linguistic analysis was conducted to understand how health professionals’ (n = 168) use of language positions themselves toward or away from engaging in aged-care work. Results Quantitative findings revealed that perceptions of physical taint directly predicted lower willingness to perform aged-care work. Perceptions of social taint, moral taint, and poor occupational conditions negatively predicted willingness to work in institutional aged care, indirectly via social devaluation. Findings from the linguistic analysis demonstrated that health professionals (re)produce stigma through aligning themselves with devaluing discourses about aged-care workers, work, and institutions. Discussion and Implications This study provides insight about the role that stigma plays in the aged-care recruitment crisis, with implications for aged-care institutions. Societal discourse may obstruct the employment of health professionals in aged care because it can (re)produce the stigma of working in aged care. Recommendations for ways to reduce the impact of this stigma include public messaging and training.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,General Medicine

Reference32 articles.

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2. The social dynamics of devaluation in an aged care context;Banks;Journal of Sociology,2018

3. Stressors, job resources, fear of contagion, and secondary traumatic stress among nursing home workers in face of the COVID-19: The case of Spain;Blanco-Donoso;Journal of Applied Gerontology,2021

4. Personnel recruitment and retention in long-term elder care.;Chenoweth,2018

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