Alleinlebende ältere Menschen - Unterstützung durch informelle Helfer am Lebensende
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A growing number of older people mainly women is living alone. They form a vulnerable group with regard to staying at home in case of care needs and especially at the end of life. Although home care services have been developed all over the country in the last years, the availability of an informal carer in the same household still is a preliminary for home death. Friends and neighbors may provide an important source of support, but as informal caregiving is mostly understood as family caregiving little regard has been paid to non-kin-carers yet. However, the question arises whether this kind of support is robust enough that staying at home for older people living alone even at the end of life is possible. This study aims to better understand how older people living alone and their non-kin carers manage to face the challenges with increased care needs towards the end-of-life. The aim is to capture change as it happens, and to correspond to the individual dynamics towards the end-of-life. Therefore this study is designed to generate longitudinal case studies by conducting serial interviews. After a baseline interview, further personal interviews with the older person and a nominated non-kin-carer for a period of 18 months will be conducted. In case of death of a patient, a retrospective interview will be performed with the main informal caregiver about 3-5 months later. A total of 20-25 complete data sets (cases) and up to 200 interviews are planned. All interviews will be transcribed and analysed following procedures of qualitative research. In the course of the study, inter- and transdisciplinary workshops shall assure quality and support knowledge transfer. With this study we aim to analyse the potential of non-kin-carers in home care arrangements and identify gender specific patterns therein. Therefore we cooperate with the Research Institute for Economics of Aging at the Vienna University of Economics and Business (formal-informal-care expertise) as well as with the Institute of Palliative Care and Organisational Ethics at the Alpen-Adria University of Klagenfurt (gender expertise). This is the first study in Austria which puts a focus on older people living alone. Equal opportunities to stay at home if preferred until death should exist for all groups of older people in society. This affords care arrangements which include support of non-kin-carers as well as professional services which are aware of the needs towards the end of life. Knowledge of the interplay of formal-informal care encounters of older people living alone, as will be provided by this study, will be vital for future developments in home care for the elderly.
| Title | Year(s) | DOI / Link |
|---|---|---|
| Nonkin Carers’ Roles and Contributions to the Support of Older People Living Alone: An Analysis of Qualitative DataThe Journals of Gerontology, Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2024 | 10.1093/geronb/gbae008 |
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