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To maintain control: Negotiations in the everyday life of older people who can no longer manage on their own.

Abstract
The general aim of this thesis is to reach a more insightful understanding of how help is actually worked out in the everyday life of older people when they can no longer manage on their own. The overall research question is how individuals, representing different perspectives in the help arrangement process, think and act in order to organise needed help as well as how they may themselves apprehend the functions of the help. It is a qualitative study, containing four papers looking at this issue from different perspectives: the older persons themselves, their next of kin who provide help and the municipal care managers who make decisions on formal help. The empirical material consists of qualitative interviews and participant observations with care managers, qualitative interviews with older people applying for formal eldercare, follow-up interviews with some of them and qualitative interviews with next of kin who provide help. The analysis of the material adopts an empirically oriented approach, involving several steps from open to focused coding. Earlier research and theory guided the analysis. The results show that older people strive to maintain control over their everyday life (Paper I). When they can no longer manage unaided, they use various strategies to maintain control and the feeling of autonomy. Wellfunctioning formal and informal networks (Paper III) allow individuals to sustain autonomy and control in old age even when they have to depend on help from others. The care managers endeavour to make both ends meet in the decision process (Paper II). They develop various techniques and struck a balance between diverse demands and expectations. Helping an older relative is connected with a multiplicity of motives and experiences (Paper IV). The next of kin act both as bridges and buffers between their older relative and formal eldercare. This thesis emphasises the important functions of both formal and informal help to older people. To outline the working forms and methods of collaboration between older people and their informal and formal support networks is an important challenge that needs further attention.
Parts of work
1. Dunér, Anna and Nordström, Monica (2005) Intentions and strategies among elderly people: Coping in everyday life. Journal of aging studies, 19, 437-451.::doi::10.1016/j.jaging.2004.10.001
 
II. Dunér, Anna and Nordström, Monica (2006) The discretion and power of street-level bureaucrats: An example from Swedish municipal eldercare. Accepted for publication in The European Journal of Social Work, 9, 425-44.::DOI::10.1080/13691450600958486
 
III. Dunér, Anna and Nordström, Monica (2007) The roles and functions of informal support networks for older people who receive formal support: a Swedish qualitative study. Ageing & Society, 27, 67-85.:: doi::10.1017/S0144686X06005344
 
IV. Dunér, Anna. ’I want to do what I can’: Next of kin helping older relatives who receive formal help – a Swedish qualitative study. Health and Social Care in the community (Submitted).
 
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
Department of Social Work
Disputation
Hörsal Sappören, Inst f socialt arbete, Sprängkullsg 23 kl. 09.15
Date of defence
2007-02-02
E-mail
Anna.Duner@socwork.gu.se
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/10319
Collections
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för socialt arbete
  • Doctoral Theses from University of Gothenburg / Doktorsavhandlingar från Göteborgs universitet
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Thesis frame (476.6Kb)
Date
2007-02-02
Author
Dunér, Anna
Keywords
Older people
Formal eldercare
Informal help
Strategies
Coping
Discretion
Power
Negotiation
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
13: 978-91-86796-66-2
10: 91-86796-66-6
ISSN
1401-5781
Series/Report no.
Skriftserien Institutionen för socialt arbete
2007:1
Language
eng
Metadata
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