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Title: AUDIT PROJECT


1
Toward Active Old Age conference 24.4.2004
Pori,Finland
Dr. Kari A Sirkka Prof. Merja Nikkonen
The UN Principles of Older Persons in European
Elderly Care Environments
-A Community Analysis on Elderly Care
Environments in Four European Countries
2
Toward Active Old Age conference 24.4.2004
Pori,Finland
Research questions
  • How do the UN Principles of Older Persons
    (46/91) appear in the elderly care practice from
    perspectives of physical, psychosocial and
    symbolic care environments in the target
    institutions selected in the four European
    countries?
  • What are the similarities and diversities
    regarding the basic elements constructing
    physical, psychosocial and symbolic elderly care
    environments in the target institutions selected
    in the four European countries?
  • What kind of overview and future challenges does
    the sample provide of the elderly care culture in
    the target institutions selected in the four
    European countries?

3
Methodology
  • Toward Active Old Age project members chose the
    target institutions in each of the four countries
    involved in this study. The institutions were
    supposed to be the average level elderly care
    institutions in the country in order to provide a
    more general perspective to elderly care
    environments in each country.
  • The staff and residents in each target
    institution were informed in advance about the
    contents, the means used and the purpose of this
    study. All the information published in this
    report is based on free personal consents to be
    used as informants (by observation, interviews,
    photographing) in this study. A copy of this
    report will be delivered to each institution
    involved.
  • The data collection process was independent from
    the institutions (translator not working for/ in
    the institution) objectivity

4
Methodology
  • The data collection and analysis followed the
    four-phased Genesis- community analysis model
    (Artinian Conger 1997, 180-182 STAKES 2003)
  • organising the audit visits in each target
    institution. The institutions involved sent the
    authors package of information consisting the
    generic information (with some statistics), care
    philosophy and areas of care activities of the
    institution
  • 2) two-day audit visits in each institution
    (audit programs included general tours in the
    institutions, meetings with the administration,
    staff, residents, relatives, civil servants
    dealing with elderly care, as well as spontaneous
    talks with people in their daily activities)
    the observational data was collected
    simultaneously during the rounds and interviews.
    Each audit day ended by checking and comparing
    the data both authors had collected. Also the
    management of each institution organised a short
    meeting for briefing the spontaneous impressions
    and notices done during the audit days.
  • focused on deeper thematic analysis by means of
    a qualitative constant comparison method that
    involves the systematic sifting and comparison of
    items of interview- and observation memos to
    reveal and establish an internal structure of
    categories (Green 1998)
  • drawing the conclusions and publishing the
    findings according to the order of the UN
    principles

5
Study design
6
Reflections on the findings
  • Care philosophy
  • Audited organisations represent a variety from
    medicine-oriented institutions to centres of
    diversified residential and non-residential care
    services
  • the most common issues named as valuebasis
    despite of the type of organisation were
  • home-likeness
  • respect of a person
  • holistic care
  • self-reliance
  • rehabilitation

Organisational value basis in care
  • The concepts are not so clear among staff
    members, and the terms require organisational
    level definitions and agreements on what they
    mean in OUR SERVICES

7
Reflections on the findings
  • Staff qualifications and other requirements
  • The amount of qualified staff varies between 40
    94
  • ? The more qualified staff the more medicalised
    the care
  • Despite of the organisations philosophy or
    ideological frame, the staff members are hired to
    do certain tasks or fill certain posts
  • tend to maintain power structure on staff- or
    task-orientation in services (rather than client-
    or life phase orientation)
  • Investments on the well-being of the staff were
    not done too much (except some annual parties
    no systematic training programs, prizing or other
    motivation systems)

Organisational value basis in care
8
Reflections on the findings
INDEPENDENCE
1. physical environment
factors facilitating self-reliance, autonomous
living, and safe activities in physical
environment
 AQUARIUM SYNDROME ?TOO EXTRAVAGANT OR TOO
POOR FACILITIES SEEM TO HAVE SAME AFFECT TO
DEPRESS INDEPENDENCE ?BUILDINGS AS ARCHITECTURAL
MONUMENTS LABEL AND SEPARATE RESIDENTS FROM OUTER
SOCIETY AS MUCH AS POOR FACILITIES SAFETY
RISKS ? RISKS IN PERSONAL SAFETY REQUIRE PERSONAL
ALARM SYSTEMS (not only apartmental ones)
9
Reflections on the findings
INDEPENDENCE
2. psychosocial environment
a question of personal freedom,
self-determination in decision-making and dignity
  •  KEEPING TOUCH TO SOCIETY
  • ALL INCLUSIVE INTRA-MURALSERVICES DIMINISH NEED
    OF GOING OUT OF THE BUILDING
  • MIGHT SUPPORT INDEPENDENCE IN THE HOUSE BUT
    REDUCES ABILITY TO MANAGE IN EXTRA-MURAL SOCIETY
  • ECONOMIC INDEPENDENCE
  • ? POVERTY IS AN EVERY DAY REALITY AMONG THE
    ELDERLY

10
Reflections on the findings
INDEPENDENCE
3. symbolic environment
balancing oneself with taking the risk of
being a burden to the staff when asking help or
giving up and loosing the autonomy
  •  PERSONAL IDENTITY AND FREEDOM
  • INDEPENDENCE IS A QUESTION OF PRESERVING ONES
    PERSONAL FREEDOM, IDENTITY, BEING A SUBJECT OR A
    PERSON
  • PERSONAL FACILITATING
  • ? SAFETY IS TO RECEIVE TRUSTWORTHY SUPPORT IN
    DECISION-MAKING PROCESSES AND HAVING SOMEONE AS
    RESIDENT'S ADVOCATE (TRUST)

11
Reflections on the findings
PARTICIPATION
1. physical environment
physical factors facilitating involvement and
attendance in various activities
  •  ENTERTAINMENT SYNDROME
  • ACTIVITIES FOCUSED MOSTLY ON ENTERTAINING RATHER
    THAN DEVELOPING THE RESIDENT'S FULL MENTAL AND
    KOGNITIVE POTENTIAL
  • ? PARTICIPATION IS NOT QUESTION OF ROOM IN THE
    FIRST PLACE (transport, attitude, encouragement,
    meaningful activities)

12
Reflections on the findings
PARTICIPATION
2. psychosocial environment
as issues related to being a subject (or
object) and possibilites to attend to societal
activities as an ordinary citizen
PARTICIPATION REQUIRES MOTIVATION ? CREATING
MEANINGFUL AND BENEFICIAL ACTIVITIES TO
PARTICIPATE IN (passive participation does not
necessarily produce well-being) ? BREAK DOWN OF
MENTAL BARRIERS HINDERING THE INVOLVEMENT IN THE
DAILY LIFE IN THE HOUSE (standing at the door
side of the kindergarten rather than daring to
get involved etc.)
13
Reflections on the findings
PARTICIPATION
3. symbolic environment
commitments in allowing personal freedom and
investment both in human resources and the
technical aids
  •  UTILISING ELEMENTS OF MEANINGFUL LIFE AND HUMAN
    RESOURCES
  • ?PERSONAL SKILLS, KNOWLEDGE AND LIFE EXPERIENCE
    IN BETTER USE
  • MINIMUM LEVEL LIFE
  • ? ACCEPTING EXTERNAL REGULATION, BEING HAPPY TO
    LIVE EASY LIFE IN ENVIRONMENT WITH BASIC
    SERVICES

14
Reflections on the findings
CARE
1. physical environment
hygienic facilities, variety of technical
aids, dining facilities, and human resources
invested on care
  •  DO GOOD FACILITIES QUARANTEE GOOD CARE?
  • ? CARE STILL OFTEN SEEN AS WORK CONFINED TO
    CERTAIN SPACE RATHER THAN TRANSFERRABLE OR
    MODIFIABLE (professional or non-professional)
    ACTIVITY
  • LIVING IN THE HOTEL gtlt HOLISTIC CARE

15
Reflections on the findings
CARE
2. psychosocial environment
attempts to deal with physical, mental and
social needs in the frames of societal resources
  WELL-BEING AND LONELINESS ? CULTURALLY
LABELLED CONCEPTS ? PROFESSIONALS TOO HASTILY
DIAGNOSING AND FINDING SCIENTIFIC EXPLANATIONS
INSTEAD OF LISTENING THE MESSAGE  ? WHAT CREATES
THE SENSE OF BEING CARED FOR? 
16
Reflections on the findings
CARE
3. symbolic environment
. 1) activities supported or implemented by
persons authorised to the task, 2) standard
package of services based on diagnosis or care
plan, 3) as various packages of services
provided according to mutual agreement with the
customer
  •  LIFE-ORIENTATION, PERSON-ORIENTATION OR SERVICE
    ORIENTATION?
  • VARIETY OF CARE ACTIVITIES AVAILABLE ("SOMETHING
    FOR EVERY ONE") INSTEAD OF UTILISING NORMAL
    SITUATIONS TO CARE PURPOSES (like reminiscing,
    health education, history projects, exhibitions
    etc)
  • TAILORED SERVICES MAY LEAD TO
  • -risk of purhasing services more than finance can
    afford
  • -unequality among the residents

17
Reflections on the findings
SELF-FULFILMENT
1. physical environment
physical factors maintaining ones personal
identity and the image of ones real
possibilities to go on with ones own life
  •  PRIVACY
  • PERSONAL SPACE WITH POSSIBILITIES TO KEEP
    PERSONAL BELONGINGS VARY FROM 60 CM SHELF (IN 3
    M2 SPACE) TO 55 M2 PRIVATE APARTMENT
  • ? HOW TO INTEGRATE PRIVACY AND COMMUNALITY

18
Reflections on the findings
SELF-FULFILMENT
2. psychosocial environment
possibilities to utilise the knowledge and
skills of the elderly. Being active understood
as physical activity
  • INVESTMENT ON HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
  • VERY LITTLE INVESTED ON EDUCATION OR HUMAN
    DEVELOPMENT
  • THE RESIDENTS PROFESSIONAL KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS OR
    LIFE EXPERIENCES NOT UTILISED IN FULL POTENTIAL
    (i.e. in collaboration with schools, day care
    units, adult education centres)
  • ? VISION OF DOING THINGS THAT WERE NOT POSSIBLE
    BEFORE RETIREMENT SEEM TO BE GIVEN UP

19
Reflections on the findings
SELF-FULFILMENT
3. symbolic environment
beliefs in being aged differ between helpless
children, exploited financial resource for the
rest of the family to respected persons as long
as one is able to take care of ones own business
  • DREAMING ABOUT SAFE AND WORRILESS LIFE
  • ? AGEING IS NEVER A PROBLEM AS LONG AS ONE IS
    ABLE TO CARE FOR ONESELF
  • TASK ORIENTED ELDERLY CARE IS NOT APPEALING BUT
    HOW ABOUT PERSON- OR WELL-BEING ORIENTED CARE?
  • ? SIFFICULTY TO KNOW WHAT YOU ARE ALLOWED TO WANT
    AFTER LONG HISTORY OF HAVING NO OPTIONS

20
Reflections on the findings
DIGNITY
1. physical environment
principles of both physical and mental safety
and respect of ones privacy
 PHYSICAL gt lt MENTAL SAFETY ? WHERE DOES THE
DANGER STAND (INSIDE OR OUTSIDE) ?
21
Reflections on the findings
DIGNITY
2. psychosocial environment
respecting one as a person, kind behaviour,
equality in approaching the residents, and
making various activities as nice and comfortable
as possible to the residents
  • SOCIAL gt lt ETHICAL SAFETY
  • ? BOARDING HOUSES (with all inclusive full board)
    MAY TURN TO BEING BORED -HOUSES
  • GOOSE MARCH PHENOMENON
  • ? SERVICES OFFERED SHOULD NOT TURN TO FINANCIAL
    EXPLOITATION

22
Reflections on the findings
DIGNITY
3. symbolic environment
opportunities to maintain ones personal life
style and taste
PERSONAL SAFETY ?FREEDOM TO BE WHO YOU
ARE Nothing would change even if the Queen
moved in here ? EQUALITY BETWEEN RESIDENTS AND
THE STAFF
23
Typology of elderly care institutions
SOCIAL SHELTER RESIDENTIAL RESORT CLIENT-CENTRED COMMUNITY INTERSUBJECTIVE WORLD
-place to stay safe in risky situations -societal obligations -sometimes isolated from other society -boarding house with restricted entrance -often requires adaptation to standard service packages and inmate culture -depending on ones own health condition activity of the relatives -economic situation -membership on voluntary basis -freedom based on the organisations commitment to certain ideology -personal state of freedom -freedom to go on with ones own life -self-determination -interpreting and understanding human life as ones lived experiences -meaningful life
-work orientation stressed on professionalism and based on the professionals views on the contents of care -work orientation stressed on professionalism and based on the professionals views on the contents of care -work orientation based on roles in the community -clients voluntarily chosen the institution as their place of living -work orientation strive for meaningful life for the residents and clients
24
Future challenges
  • Institutional level
  • -flexibility and integration of fragmented
    services for everybodys benefit
  • -development of new approach to services
  • (life histories education for third age
    resource-thinking etc.)
  • -facilitating and empowering staff and residents
    together to innovations
  • (creating possibilities for residents to develop
    their self- fulfilment in full potential)
  • -changing philosophy from medicalisation or
    uniformed charity to serving clients based on
    their individual needs
  • (well-being rather than treatment)
  • -actions to encourage family involvement in
    clients lives

25
Future challenges
  • Residential/ client level
  • -claim of bigger role and involvement in ones
    own care life in institutions
  • -shortage of meaningful activities
  • -utilisation of residents knowledge and skills
    better in voluntary work (meaningful things to
    do)
  • -lack of privacy
  • -how to maintain the same level in dignity when a
    person got ill or demented?
  • -connections with family members
  • (phone connections, facilities to spend time
    together)
  • -financial situation due to poor social security
    should not affect the residents status as
    citizens and human beings

26
Future challenges
  • Staff level
  • -getting rid of traditional burden of doing on
    ones behalf to keep wheels running
  • -avoiding the culture of separation among/
    between the staff and the residents
  • -changes in working culture from task
    task-centred thinking to client- or
    service-oriented approach
  • -focus more on well-being
  • -from job/ position -orientation to facilitating
  • -focus set on the sense of becoming cared
  • -obtain and apply new knowledge on elderly care
    (gerontological, resource oriented approach to
    care)
  • -clarifiying organisational/ personal values on
    regular basis (esp. how to apply into practice)

27
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28
THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION
www.activeoldage.com Satakunnan
ammattikorkeakoulun raportit 1/2004
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