Care Home Life and Identity: A Qualitative Case Study

Author:

Paddock Katie123,Brown Wilson Christine4,Walshe Catherine5,Todd Chris126

Affiliation:

1. School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, Division of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work, University of Manchester, UK

2. Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, UK

3. Psychological Sciences, Institute of Psychology, Health, and Society, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK

4. School of Nursing and Midwifery, Queen’s University, Belfast, UK

5. International Observatory on End of Life Care, Division of Health Research, Furness Building, Lancaster University, UK

6. Manchester University Foundation NHS Foundation Trust, UK

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectivesThe transition to a care home can involve multiple changes and losses that can affect an older person’s well-being and identity. It is not clear how older people perceive and manage their identity within a care home over time. This study explores how living in a care home affects the identities of residents and how they address this in their daily lives.Research Design and MethodsA multiple qualitative case study approach incorporated interview and observational data. Eighteen semistructured interviews and 260 hr of observations were conducted over 1 year with care home residents, relatives, and staff across three care homes within Greater Manchester, UK. Data were analyzed using framework analysis, drawing on the social identity perspective as an interpretive lens.ResultsFour themes were identified: (a) changing with age, (b) independence and autonomy, (c) bounded identity, and (d) social comparison. The impact of aging that initially altered residents’ identities was exacerbated by the care home environment. Institutional restrictions jeopardized independence and autonomy, provoking residents to redefine this within the allowances of the care home. Strict routines and resource constraints of well-meaning staff resulted in the bounded expression of personalities. Consequently, to forge a positive identity, residents without dementia engaged in social comparison with residents with dementia, emphasizing their superior cognitive and physical abilities.Discussion and ImplicationsSocial comparison as an adaptive strategy has previously been unidentified in care home literature. Residents need more support to express their identities, which may reduce the necessity of social comparison, and improve interrelationships and well-being.

Funder

Medical Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,General Medicine

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