Projects per year
Abstract
Background:
Legislation places an onus on local authorities to be aware of care needs in their locality and to prevent and reduce care and support needs. The existing literature overlooksostensibly ‘healthy’ and/or non-users of specific services, non-health services and informal assistance and therefore inadequately explains what happens before or instead of individuals seeking services. We sought to address these gaps by exploring older adults’ accounts of seeking assistance in later life.
Methods:
We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with 40 adults aged 68-95. We invited participants to discuss any type of support, intervention, or service provision, whether medical, social, family-provided, paid or unpaid.
Findings:
This paper reports older people’s accounts of how they evaluated their need for assistance. We found that the people in our sample engaged in a recursive process, evaluatingtheir needs on an issue-by-issue basis. Participants’ progression through this process hinged on four factors: their acknowledgement of decline; the perceived impact of decline on their usual activities and independence; their preparedness to be a recipient of assistance; and, the opportunity to assert their need. In lieu of seeking assistance, participants engaged in self-management, but also received unsolicited or emergency assistance.
Conclusions:
Older people’s adaptations to change and attempts to meet their needs without assistance mean that they do not present to services, limiting the local authority’s knowledge of their needs and ability to plan appropriate services. Our findings offer four stages for policymakers, service providers and carers to target to address the uptake of assistance.
Legislation places an onus on local authorities to be aware of care needs in their locality and to prevent and reduce care and support needs. The existing literature overlooksostensibly ‘healthy’ and/or non-users of specific services, non-health services and informal assistance and therefore inadequately explains what happens before or instead of individuals seeking services. We sought to address these gaps by exploring older adults’ accounts of seeking assistance in later life.
Methods:
We conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with 40 adults aged 68-95. We invited participants to discuss any type of support, intervention, or service provision, whether medical, social, family-provided, paid or unpaid.
Findings:
This paper reports older people’s accounts of how they evaluated their need for assistance. We found that the people in our sample engaged in a recursive process, evaluatingtheir needs on an issue-by-issue basis. Participants’ progression through this process hinged on four factors: their acknowledgement of decline; the perceived impact of decline on their usual activities and independence; their preparedness to be a recipient of assistance; and, the opportunity to assert their need. In lieu of seeking assistance, participants engaged in self-management, but also received unsolicited or emergency assistance.
Conclusions:
Older people’s adaptations to change and attempts to meet their needs without assistance mean that they do not present to services, limiting the local authority’s knowledge of their needs and ability to plan appropriate services. Our findings offer four stages for policymakers, service providers and carers to target to address the uptake of assistance.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 466-473 |
| Journal | Age and Ageing |
| Volume | 47 |
| Issue number | 3 |
| Early online date | 5 Jan 2018 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 May 2018 |
Keywords
- Qualitative Research
- Older People
- Service Uptake
- Needs Evaluation
- Assistance
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Dive into the research topics of 'Seeking assistance in later life: How do older people evaluate their need for assistance?'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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Maintaining function and well-being in later life: a longitudinal cohort study
1/07/10 → 19/01/18
Project: Research
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Social Exclusion and Use of Care Services in Wales
MacLeod, C. (Speaker)
15 Jan 2019Activity: Talk or presentation › Oral presentation
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Shaping research to support older people in Wales.
MacLeod, C. (Speaker)
23 Jan 2018Activity: Participating in or organising an event › Participation in Academic workshop, seminar, course