Managing transition to nursing home
(2023) Transforming Care- Abstract
- Relocation to residential care facilities is a unique type of transition. For most older people it is the last
move they make in their life when they have no other options. The transition itself involves numerous
challenges. There is a lot of knowledge about the situations before and after relocating to a nursing home,
but few studies are based on the actual relocation process. This paper explores older people’s perceptions
during the transition process when they are placed in a stand-by position: having a general decision of the
right to move into a nursing home but waiting for an offer that must result in acceptance or admission on
short notice. Knowledge capturing the actual relocation process is of particular... (More) - Relocation to residential care facilities is a unique type of transition. For most older people it is the last
move they make in their life when they have no other options. The transition itself involves numerous
challenges. There is a lot of knowledge about the situations before and after relocating to a nursing home,
but few studies are based on the actual relocation process. This paper explores older people’s perceptions
during the transition process when they are placed in a stand-by position: having a general decision of the
right to move into a nursing home but waiting for an offer that must result in acceptance or admission on
short notice. Knowledge capturing the actual relocation process is of particular importance as this process
itself may elevate the risk of death. This paper is based on interviews with people during their transition to
a nursing home. The article examines how older people experience and deal with the relocation process.
The findings show how older people do different types of “work” during the relocation. The first is practical
work (processing practical details involved in the move). The second is relational work (the relocation are
connected to, and facilitated by, family members, home care services, nursing home staff and residents
etc.). The last one is emotional work (processing old age and illnesses/disabilities). (Less) - Abstract (Swedish)
- Relocation to residential care facilities is a unique type of transition. For most older people it is the last
move they make in their life when they have no other options. The transition itself involves numerous
challenges. There is a lot of knowledge about the situations before and after relocating to a nursing home,
but few studies are based on the actual relocation process. This paper explores older people’s perceptions
during the transition process when they are placed in a stand-by position: having a general decision of the
right to move into a nursing home but waiting for an offer that must result in acceptance or admission on
short notice. Knowledge capturing the actual relocation process is of particular... (More) - Relocation to residential care facilities is a unique type of transition. For most older people it is the last
move they make in their life when they have no other options. The transition itself involves numerous
challenges. There is a lot of knowledge about the situations before and after relocating to a nursing home,
but few studies are based on the actual relocation process. This paper explores older people’s perceptions
during the transition process when they are placed in a stand-by position: having a general decision of the
right to move into a nursing home but waiting for an offer that must result in acceptance or admission on
short notice. Knowledge capturing the actual relocation process is of particular importance as this process
itself may elevate the risk of death. This paper is based on interviews with people during their transition to
a nursing home. The article examines how older people experience and deal with the relocation process.
The findings show how older people do different types of “work” during the relocation. The first is practical
work (processing practical details involved in the move). The second is relational work (the relocation are
connected to, and facilitated by, family members, home care services, nursing home staff and residents
etc.). The last one is emotional work (processing old age and illnesses/disabilities). (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/fb68d9b6-45b7-45ec-a290-6058ba7c2093
- author
- Arvidsson, Linda
LU
; Harnett, Tove
LU
and Alftberg, Åsa LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2023-06-26
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- unpublished
- subject
- conference name
- Transforming Care
- conference location
- Sheffield, United Kingdom
- conference dates
- 2023-06-26 - 2023-06-28
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- fb68d9b6-45b7-45ec-a290-6058ba7c2093
- date added to LUP
- 2025-04-28 14:16:55
- date last changed
- 2025-05-02 08:00:07
@misc{fb68d9b6-45b7-45ec-a290-6058ba7c2093, abstract = {{Relocation to residential care facilities is a unique type of transition. For most older people it is the last<br/>move they make in their life when they have no other options. The transition itself involves numerous<br/>challenges. There is a lot of knowledge about the situations before and after relocating to a nursing home,<br/>but few studies are based on the actual relocation process. This paper explores older people’s perceptions<br/>during the transition process when they are placed in a stand-by position: having a general decision of the<br/>right to move into a nursing home but waiting for an offer that must result in acceptance or admission on<br/>short notice. Knowledge capturing the actual relocation process is of particular importance as this process<br/>itself may elevate the risk of death. This paper is based on interviews with people during their transition to<br/>a nursing home. The article examines how older people experience and deal with the relocation process.<br/>The findings show how older people do different types of “work” during the relocation. The first is practical<br/>work (processing practical details involved in the move). The second is relational work (the relocation are<br/>connected to, and facilitated by, family members, home care services, nursing home staff and residents<br/>etc.). The last one is emotional work (processing old age and illnesses/disabilities).}}, author = {{Arvidsson, Linda and Harnett, Tove and Alftberg, Åsa}}, language = {{eng}}, month = {{06}}, title = {{Managing transition to nursing home}}, year = {{2023}}, }