Maintaining autonomy: How older persons with chronic conditions and their significant others interpret, navigate, and overcome everyday difficulties

Background The vast majority of older adults live in their own homes. Many of them live with chronic conditions that lead to activity limitations and participation restrictions. To support them adequately, we need to better understand how they cope with everyday difficulties.Aim To identify and exam...

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Main Authors: Thomas Ballmer, Brigitte Gantschnig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2024-12-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Occupational Therapy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/11038128.2023.2249959
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author Thomas Ballmer
Brigitte Gantschnig
author_facet Thomas Ballmer
Brigitte Gantschnig
author_sort Thomas Ballmer
collection DOAJ
description Background The vast majority of older adults live in their own homes. Many of them live with chronic conditions that lead to activity limitations and participation restrictions. To support them adequately, we need to better understand how they cope with everyday difficulties.Aim To identify and examine difficulties in everyday life older people with chronic conditions who live in private homes face and how they and their significant others interpret, navigate, and overcome these difficulties.Material and Methods We conducted a focus group interview with 10 participants including eight older adults with chronic conditions and two of their significant others. We then transcribed the interviews verbatim and thematically analysed them.Results We generated the three closely interrelated themes struggling not to lose control, a shifting balance between resources and environmental challenges, and negotiating independence and interdependence. Participants interpreted the difficulties they faced as multicausal. Their main goal was maintaining autonomy, agency, and a positive identity. They employed individual, creative strategies to achieve these goals.Conclusions Older persons with chronic conditions prioritise autonomy and agency in order to maintain a positive identity.Significance Interventions to support older persons with chronic conditions should centre their priorities and build on their creativity.
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spelling doaj-art-d5221b5ae5924e93871678179742d8e82025-01-24T17:53:19ZengTaylor & Francis GroupScandinavian Journal of Occupational Therapy1103-81281651-20142024-12-0131110.1080/11038128.2023.2249959Maintaining autonomy: How older persons with chronic conditions and their significant others interpret, navigate, and overcome everyday difficultiesThomas Ballmer0Brigitte Gantschnig1Institute of Occupational Therapy, School of Health Sciences, ZHAW Zurich University of Applied Sciences, Winterthur, SwitzerlandInstitute of Occupational Therapy, School of Health Sciences, ZHAW Zurich University of Applied Sciences, Winterthur, SwitzerlandBackground The vast majority of older adults live in their own homes. Many of them live with chronic conditions that lead to activity limitations and participation restrictions. To support them adequately, we need to better understand how they cope with everyday difficulties.Aim To identify and examine difficulties in everyday life older people with chronic conditions who live in private homes face and how they and their significant others interpret, navigate, and overcome these difficulties.Material and Methods We conducted a focus group interview with 10 participants including eight older adults with chronic conditions and two of their significant others. We then transcribed the interviews verbatim and thematically analysed them.Results We generated the three closely interrelated themes struggling not to lose control, a shifting balance between resources and environmental challenges, and negotiating independence and interdependence. Participants interpreted the difficulties they faced as multicausal. Their main goal was maintaining autonomy, agency, and a positive identity. They employed individual, creative strategies to achieve these goals.Conclusions Older persons with chronic conditions prioritise autonomy and agency in order to maintain a positive identity.Significance Interventions to support older persons with chronic conditions should centre their priorities and build on their creativity.https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/11038128.2023.2249959Autonomychronic illnessidentityoccupational therapyelderly
spellingShingle Thomas Ballmer
Brigitte Gantschnig
Maintaining autonomy: How older persons with chronic conditions and their significant others interpret, navigate, and overcome everyday difficulties
Scandinavian Journal of Occupational Therapy
Autonomy
chronic illness
identity
occupational therapy
elderly
title Maintaining autonomy: How older persons with chronic conditions and their significant others interpret, navigate, and overcome everyday difficulties
title_full Maintaining autonomy: How older persons with chronic conditions and their significant others interpret, navigate, and overcome everyday difficulties
title_fullStr Maintaining autonomy: How older persons with chronic conditions and their significant others interpret, navigate, and overcome everyday difficulties
title_full_unstemmed Maintaining autonomy: How older persons with chronic conditions and their significant others interpret, navigate, and overcome everyday difficulties
title_short Maintaining autonomy: How older persons with chronic conditions and their significant others interpret, navigate, and overcome everyday difficulties
title_sort maintaining autonomy how older persons with chronic conditions and their significant others interpret navigate and overcome everyday difficulties
topic Autonomy
chronic illness
identity
occupational therapy
elderly
url https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/11038128.2023.2249959
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