Hayden Leigh, Warren-Norton Kathryn, Chaze Ferzana, Roberts Rebecca
Centre for Elder Research, Sheridan College, Oakville, Ontario, Canada.
Faculty of Applied Health and Community Studies, Sheridan College, Oakville, Ontario, Canada.
Can J Aging. 2023 Mar;42(1):154-164. doi: 10.1017/S0714980822000113. Epub 2022 May 30.
To document the reactions and experiences of older persons during the COVID-19 pandemic, we have conducted a qualitative study of 25 older adults (50 years of age and older) throughout the pandemic, using serial interviewing methods. This analysis reports on the data collected from the first two rounds of interviews - one conducted in the summer of 2020 and one conducted in the fall of 2020. Our thematic analysis found eight major themes: thoughts on the dangers of the pandemic, how the virus has changed daily life (including social life), health care during COVID (being a caregiver, losing a loved one, seeking health care), missing spontaneity and dealing with existential dread, the growing frustration, seeking connection through civic participation, adaptation and resilience, and the social ills that the pandemic has revealed. These stories describe both loneliness and connection, hope coupled with disappointment, but overwhelmingly, an insight into what the pandemic has shown us about the social ills that it has revealed.
为记录老年人在新冠疫情期间的反应和经历,我们在整个疫情期间对25名老年人(50岁及以上)进行了一项定性研究,采用系列访谈方法。本分析报告了从前两轮访谈中收集的数据——一轮于2020年夏季进行,另一轮于2020年秋季进行。我们的主题分析发现了八个主要主题:对疫情危险的看法、病毒如何改变日常生活(包括社交生活)、新冠疫情期间的医疗保健(作为照顾者、失去亲人、寻求医疗保健)、怀念随性以及应对生存恐惧、日益增长的挫败感、通过公民参与寻求联系、适应能力和恢复力,以及疫情所揭示的社会弊病。这些故事既描述了孤独与联系、希望与失望,但最重要的是,洞察了疫情向我们揭示的社会弊病。