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Coming to Terms:
African Americans' Complex Ways of Coping with
Life in a Nursing Home
L.
Groger
2002
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Based on qualitative interviews with 14 nursing
home residents and 13 caregivers, this article
explores how elders adapted to life in a nursing
home, and how their caregivers came to embrace
nursing home placement as the optimal way to meet
their elders' need for care. These processes were
mediated by two mechanisms: the function the institution
fulfilled for residents and their caregivers,
and the coping strategies residents used to adapt
to institutional living. The wide variety of elders'
psycho-emotional coping strategies can best be
summarized as accommodation, resignation, and
resistance which translate into a number of behaviors.
However, there was no typical or neat movement
from resistance to resignation followed by accommodation.
Instead, residents pulled from their repertoire
of coping strategies the ones that served them
best in a given situation and in a way that allowed
them to express simultaneously satisfaction and
discontent, compromise and adjustment. Clark and
Anderson's (1967) model of adaptation proved useful
for understanding participants' struggle to come
to terms with life in the nursing home.
(Published
in The International Journal of Aging and
Human Development, vol. 55, no. 3, 183-205.)
Paper reprints of this article are not available
through Scripps Gerontology Center, to obtain
a copy of this publication check with the author,
the journal,
or
your local library.
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