Place-Making through Media: How Media Environments Make a Difference for Long-Term Care Residents’ Agency
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Context
2.3. Methods
3. Results
3.1. Negotiating New Social Spaces and Dependencies
I was in other places [assisted living facilities], and this is oriented mostly towards people with dementia… People just don’t do it here [make friendships]. Before I broke my hip, I was getting around in my wheelchair by myself and, uh, by just peddling my feet, you know. I can say there’s hardly anybody up and down the aisles that I know anything about except maybe some of the ones that we are seated with at the dining room… but you don’t [get to know them] either because your food comes, and you have to get on with it and get the meal over with because they need the room. …It’s not very social… It’s not that I’m not that friendly. They all just go back to their rooms, and that’s what it is.
For two or three years I just declined it [moving into long-term care], I just stayed away from it. You don’t want to give up your individuality and your independence. So finally I reached a point where I agreed with them that I couldn’t handle things for myself anymore… The more I get into this place, I find that I have a feeling for a certain comradery with staff because they seem to understand where I’m coming from… You know, because it’s quite a change, as I say, giving up your independence. I won’t say losing it, but giving it up.
It took me a little while to get used to the people here. … and [then] I thought, you know, I am helping someone… it gives me something to do besides sitting in the [room]…guess I’m more or less here to help people and this is what I want.
3.2. Media Habits and Attachments
We used to read the comic books about TV. In the comic books, people had TV! “Well, there it is there, they’ve got it!” It was so far advanced and everything, but nobody ever had one. And then all of a sudden it came out.
I’ve been reading it [a novel] forever it seems like… and I keep going back and going over it again. I’m not trying to do that, but it’s what happens. I always have to go back and see how did that come about.
3.3. Making Outside Connections
Something’s gotta give for me. You know I look at that building over there, and I got a friend, a few years ago… and he stayed there and we went for a breakfast there every morning, the one on the left … and it was pretty good. And so, it was a lot of fun, but, I’m stuck here.
I’ve lived in the city all my life…. Every part of the town has changed to some degree. Every part. It’s a lot of years you know. The thing I do, I like to get a bus trip… go around and look at the changes.
Since I’ve been in here, it’s [the number of visitors she receives] not as much as in the [assisted living facility]. Because when I was in the [assisted living facility] I could invite them for lunch, afternoon tea. It was a more normal life for me, whatever normal is.
Oh, I don’t know [if he can access the Internet on his phone]. I don’t like texting. I phone. My eyes aren’t the greatest. I can’t see the small print and I can’t make my finger go like this. You know, I don’t bother.
I don’t have a TV in my room, I don’t get the newspaper cause it costs money, and I don’t have any, so I don’t know what’s going on in the world. I mean I read the newspaper when I find one laying around… I mean I don’t know really what’s going on, and who’s the best person [to vote for], I mean I’ve got no way of knowing. I mean if I watched the news on a regular basis, yeah, I would figure it out, but I don’t have a TV.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Two residents declined and one was in hospital at the planned interview time. |
2 | Two interview participants did not give a guided tour: one was bedridden at the time of research and the other did not usually move around the care home and preferred to stay in the room. |
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Participant 1 | Age | Living Situation | Personally Owned Technologies | Most Valued Medium |
---|---|---|---|---|
Barbara | 73 | Personal room | Radio | Phone 2 (in lounge) |
Doris | 91 | Personal room | TV, phone | Newspaper (personal subscription) |
George | 73 | Personal room | Cell phone, radio (doesn’t work) | TV (in lounge) + cell phone |
Helen | 86 | Personal room | CD player (unable to use) | Magazines (personal collection) |
Irene | 57 | Personal room | TV, e-reader, cell phone | e-reader + cell phone |
Lois | 83 | Personal room | Phone (needs help with outgoing calls) | Common spaces (talking to staff and residents in the hallways and lounge) |
Mabel | 94 | Personal room | Phone (needs help with outgoing calls), Radio | Radio (in room) |
Mary | 96 | Personal room | Phone (needs help with outgoing calls) | Books (personal collection) |
Patricia | 81 | Shared room | Radio (unable to use) | Window |
Ruth | 90 | Shared room | Phone, TV | Phone (in room) |
Shirley | 101 | Personal room | Phone (needs help with outgoing calls), CD player | Phone (in room) + CD player |
Thomas | 82 | Personal room | TV | TV (in room) |
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Wagner, S. Place-Making through Media: How Media Environments Make a Difference for Long-Term Care Residents’ Agency. Societies 2022, 12, 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010027
Wagner S. Place-Making through Media: How Media Environments Make a Difference for Long-Term Care Residents’ Agency. Societies. 2022; 12(1):27. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010027
Chicago/Turabian StyleWagner, Sarah. 2022. "Place-Making through Media: How Media Environments Make a Difference for Long-Term Care Residents’ Agency" Societies 12, no. 1: 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010027
APA StyleWagner, S. (2022). Place-Making through Media: How Media Environments Make a Difference for Long-Term Care Residents’ Agency. Societies, 12(1), 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc12010027