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Volume 6, Issue 4 (Suppl)

J Nurs Care, an open access journal

ISSN: 2167-1168

World Nursing 2017

July 10-12, 2017

23

rd

World Nursing and Healthcare Conference

July 10-12, 2017 Berlin, Germany

The life of the elderly in residential care facilities- A study of autonomy and life situation of elderly people

in the context of the political organisation of the facilities

Ulla Skjodt

University College Zealand, Denmark

Aim

: To examine how the political organisation of the residential care facilities in Denmark can be perceived in the practice of these

facilities and furthermore an examination of which consequences this organisation has for the autonomy and life situation of the

elderly.

Methods

: Based on a practical-philosophical approach in which theory and practice are inextricably linked as well as mutually

informing each other. The autonomy of the elderly can be determined in relation to lived lives of the elderly people in their encounter

with the political framework of the residential care facilities, and is therefore anthropological present in the form of practical

concept(s). Empirical material is therefore generated by participant observation on wards and by interviewing elderly, relatives and

employees in residential care facilities, as well as policy documents, concerning the arrangement of public help to elderly people in

need of long-term care, are analysed.

Results

: Analysis of the empirical material and of pertinent policy documents reveal that elderly people are politically valued, when

they manage to avoid drawing on the public services that are available to them.

A current dominant political standardised concept of autonomy is throughout the analysis rendered visible. In its generalised form

this concept turns out to be contradictory to the life situation of impaired individual elderly people living in residential care facilities.

The cynicism of the past appears to be a way to implement rational and efficient problem-solving as a replacement for the welfare in

which experts set the agenda for production and distribution of treatment and care based on moral responsibility.

The consequences of the present organisational controlling ideology become clear in the empirical data material, when some members

of the staff fail to provide political standardised help and dare to make situated judgements that meet the impaired elderly with a

situated and open concept of autonomy valuing the life situation of the elderly.

Biography

Ulla Skjødt has a professional background in nursing and management. She has completed a Master of Ethics and Values in Organisation (MEVO) and her Ph.D. at

Aarhus University, Philosophical Institute. She is now Associate Professor at University College Zealand in Denmark (University of applied science) doing research

in the area of elderly care.

Ulla Skjodt, J Nurs Care 2017, 6:4(Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2167-1168-C1-049