Document Type
Article
Date of Original Version
2012
Abstract
In this article, we are concerned with narratives of elderly women's well-being from their perspectives of the latter parts of their life, living at special housing accommodation (SHA) in the context of Swedish elderly care. In focusing on narratives about well-being, we have a two-fold focus: (1) how the elderly women create their own identity and meaning-making based on lifetime experience; and (2) how narratives of well-being are reflected through the filter of life in situ at the SHA.
Based on empirical data consisting of well-being narratives, a dialogical performance analysis was undertaken. The results show how relationships with important persons during various stages of life, and being together and enjoying fellowship with other people as well as enjoying freedom and self-determination, are central aspects of well-being. The conclusions drawn are that the characteristic phenomena of well-being (the what) in the narratives are continuity, identity, and sociality for the elderly person, and this is manifested (the how) as a question of contrasting the state of self-management and self-decline.
Citation/Publisher Attribution
ANN-MARIE Svensson, LENA B. MÅrtensson & ULLA H. HellstrÖm Muhli (2012) Well-being dialogue: Elderly women's subjective sense of well-being from their course of life perspective, International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being, 7:1, DOI: 10.3402/qhw.v7i0.19207
Available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.3402/qhw.v7i0.19207