Affiliation:
1. Department of Public Health and Primary Care, Cambridge Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
2. School of Health Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK
Abstract
Abstract
Background
It can be challenging for general practitioners to support their oldest old patients through the complex process of relocation.
Objective
To provide a typology of the experiences of moving in very old age that is clinically useful for practitioners navigating very old people’s relocation.
Methods
Qualitative analysis of data from a mixed-methods UK population-based longitudinal study, Cambridge City over-75s Cohort (CC75C), from Year 21 follow-up onwards. Interviews with participants aged ≥95 years old and proxy informants (Year 21: 44/48, 92%, subsequent attrition all deaths). Thematic analysis of qualitative data available from 26/32 participants who moved before they died.
Results
Individuals who moved voluntarily in with family experienced gratitude, and those who moved into sheltered house or care homes voluntarily had no regrets. One voluntary move into care was experienced with regret, loss and increased isolation as it severed life-long community ties. Regret and loss were key experiences for those making involuntary moves into care, but acceptance, relief and appreciation of increased company were also observed. The key experience of family members was trauma. Establishing connections with people or place ahead of moving, for example through previous respite care, eased moving. A checklist for practitioners based on the resulting typology of relocation is proposed.
Conclusions
Most of the sample moved into residential care. This study highlights the importance of connections to locality, people and place along with good family relationships as the key facilitators of a healthy transition into care for the oldest old. The proposed checklist may have clinical utility.
Funder
BUPA Foundation
Abbeyfield Research Foundation
National Institute for Health Research
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
10 articles.
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