Life-Course Marginalities of Positive Health and Aging: A Participatory Approach Integrating the Lived Experiences of Older Irish Travelers and Older Homeless Adults in Multistakeholder Research Processes

Author:

Walsh Kieran1ORCID,Carroll Brídín1,MacFarlane Anne2,O’Donovan Diarmuid3,Cush Peter1

Affiliation:

1. Irish Centre for Social Gerontology, Institute for Lifecourse and Society, National University of Ireland Galway, Galway, Ireland

2. School of Medicine, and Health Research Institute, Faculty of Education & Health Sciences, University of Limerick, Limerick, Ireland

3. School of Medicine, Dentistry and Biomedical Sciences, Queens University, Belfast, Antrim, UK

Abstract

There is increased emphasis on adopting positive health and aging policy goals for heterogeneous older populations, and recognition of the role that participatory research approaches can play in supporting their implementation. However, questions remain about how to represent the marginalized experiences of some older populations within such processes. With a focus on older Irish ethnic Travelers and older homeless adults as two vulnerable populations in Ireland, this article presents and critically discusses a participatory approach developed to integrate marginalized older adult perspectives on positive health and aging in a multistakeholder research and development process. The qualitative methodology is first detailed, incorporating methods that harness collaboratively derived views and individual narratives (e.g., focus groups; consultation forums; in-depth interviews). Critical reflections on research implementation and specific considerations relevant to these populations are presented (e.g., trust building; one-to-one facilitation), with lessons then drawn for the design of multistakeholder participatory approaches with marginalized older populations.

Funder

Health Services Executive, Department of Health and Atlantic Philanthropies through the Healthy and Positive Ageing Initiative (HaPAI) partnership

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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