Tampere University, Gerontology Research Center (GEREC), Centre of Excellence in Research on Ageing and Care (CoE AgeCare), Faculty of Social Sciences, P.O. Box 100, 33014, Finland.
University of Helsinki, Centre of Excellence in Research on Ageing and Care (CoE AgeCare), Faculty of Social Sciences, P.O. Box 54, 00014, Finland.
J Aging Stud. 2023 Dec;67:101167. doi: 10.1016/j.jaging.2023.101167. Epub 2023 Sep 6.
Under COVID-19 restrictions, older people were advised to avoid social contact and to self-isolate at home. The situation forced them to reconsider their everyday social spaces such as home and leisure time places. This study approached the meaning of social spaces for older people by examining how older people positioned themselves in relation to social spaces during the pandemic. The data were drawn from the Ageing and social well-being (SoWell) research project at Tampere University, Finland, and they consisted of phone interviews collected during the summer of 2020 with 31 older persons aged 64-96 years. The data were analysed using the frameworks of positioning analysis and environmental positioning. Results showed the positions of older people being manifold, flexible and even contradictory. Within home, the participants portrayed themselves as restricted due to limited social contact, but also as able to adapt to and content being alone. Virtual spaces were depicted as spaces for younger and healthy persons, and the participants themselves as sceptical technology users not satisfied with technology-mediated interaction. Within an assisted living facility, the participants described themselves as sensible and responsible persons who wanted to follow the facility's pandemic-related rules but also as independent persons having nothing to do with these rules. In the spaces outside the home, the participants portrayed themselves as persons who followed pandemic instructions but also as persons who were not required to follow the instructions because they could use their own judgement. These self-positions shed light on the social needs of older people in the spaces of their everyday lives. Our results provide useful insights for policy makers and professionals working with older people and will help to promote spaces of living, care and everyday life that can enhance and maintain social interaction and well-being both in times of change and in more stable times.
在 COVID-19 限制下,老年人被建议避免社交接触并在家中自我隔离。这种情况迫使他们重新考虑自己的日常社交空间,如家庭和休闲场所。本研究通过考察老年人在大流行期间如何定位自己与社交空间的关系,探讨了社交空间对老年人的意义。数据来自芬兰坦佩雷大学的老龄化和社会福利(SoWell)研究项目,由 2020 年夏天对 31 名 64-96 岁老年人进行的电话访谈收集而成。数据分析采用定位分析和环境定位框架。结果表明,老年人的立场是多样的、灵活的,甚至是矛盾的。在家庭内部,参与者描述自己由于社交接触有限而受到限制,但也能够适应并满足于独处。虚拟空间被描绘为年轻人和健康人的空间,而参与者自己则是对技术持怀疑态度的技术使用者,对技术介导的互动不满意。在辅助生活设施内,参与者将自己描述为明智和负责任的人,他们希望遵守设施与大流行病相关的规则,但也作为独立的人,与这些规则无关。在家庭之外的空间中,参与者将自己描述为遵守大流行病指示的人,但也作为无需遵守指示的人,因为他们可以自行判断。这些自我定位揭示了老年人在日常生活空间中的社会需求。我们的研究结果为与老年人合作的政策制定者和专业人员提供了有用的见解,并将有助于促进居住、护理和日常生活空间,这些空间可以在变革时期和更稳定时期增强和维持社会互动和幸福感。