Patterns of Caregiving Following the Institutionalization of Elderly Husbands
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine the caregiving career of older women following the institutionalization of their husbands. Informed by the interpretive perspective in sociology and Hughes's (1971) concept of career, the study employed a longitudinal, prospective, and descriptive design and combined the quantitative and qualitative approaches. The data used in the analysis were drawn from a larger study designed to explore the transition to quasi-widowhood and wives' responses to their husbands' institutionalization. The caregiving career of wives was seen as a pattern of frequent visiting and increasing involvement in the provision of care. Over the nine-month period of the study, two caregiving patterns emerged that were distinguished by a variety of circumstances and interactions. Wives who relinquished aspects of caregiving were more likelyDownloads
Published
1997-04-13
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