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Issue title: Environmental Design
Guest editors: Peter Vink, Conne Mara Bazley and Karen Jacobs
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Roberts, Emily
Affiliations: Oklahoma State Universtiy, Department of Design, Housing and Merchandising, 431 Human Sciences, Stillwater, OK 74078, USA Tel.: +405 744 3818; Fax: +405 744 6910; E-mail: [email protected]
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Regulating risk, freedom of action, and autonomy in decision making are problems shared by both caregivers and residents in long term care settings, and may become the subject of tension and constant negotiation. OBJECTIVE: This study focuses on long term care staff and management perceptions of day to day life in a care community which has gone through a culture change transition, where small residentially scaled households replace large instutional models of care. In each household, the setting is considered to be home for the 8–12 residents, creating a major shift of roles for the caregivers; they are, in essence, coming into a home rather than institutional environment as a place of work. This potentially changes the dynamics of both patterns of work for caregivers and patterns of daily living for residents. METHODS: Participant observations and care staff interviews. RESULTS: Several key themes emrged which include: teamwork; the culture of care; regulating risk; the physical environment and care staff empowerment. CONCLUSIONS: An unexpected outcome was the consensus among care staff that it is they who feel at home while working in the care households, leading to empowerment in their work roles and a deeper understanding of the importance of their role in the lives of the residents.
Keywords: Person-centered care, small house model, skilled nursing facility
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-162373
Journal: Work, vol. 54, no. 4, pp. 837-851, 2016
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