Synopses & Reviews
This is the only collection of its kind to offer an inside view of life and work in contemporary nursing homes with the purpose of developing a theory of the culture of long term care. The anthropological research in nursing homes presented here produces a seldom seen native view of patients, staff, and the day-to-day workings of American nursing homes. The use of ethnographic methods penetrates the reality barriers found in industry descriptions, muck-raking discourse, and general societal aversion toward nursing homes. The tensions found between and within staff culture and patient culture are explored in terms of adaptations to institutional life in the context of current policy and the larger American ageist culture.
Review
This book offers many insights into the inner workings of a nursing home, the care of aging in general, and the effect of providing that care on the community. It is a rich resource for social workers, offering innovative ways to frame and explore different aspects of caretaking. The ethnographic lens provides a unique framework to study lives of the people in the community who are affected by the institutional provision of care to the elderly. This collection provides a full engaging study of the topic.Social Work in Health Care
About the Author
J. NEIL HENDERSON, a medical anthropologist and authority on Alzheimer's disease and related disorders, is Associate Professor in Psychiatry and faculty in the Department of Community and Family Health, College of Public Health, and at the Suncoast Gerontology Center, College of Medicine, University of South Florida.MARIA D. VESPERI, a cultural anthropologist, is Associate Professor of Anthropology at New College of the University of South Florida in Sarasota.
Table of Contents
Foreword by Philip B. Stafford
Introduction
Perspective on Ethnographic Methods, Analysis and Findings
Nursing Home Research Comes of