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1.
J Women Aging ; 29(2): 173-184, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27485043

RESUMO

Understanding women's attitudes toward retirement is crucial for being able to help women adjust to this transition. The present study uses interviews and questionnaires to understand retirement ambivalence and the role that close relationships play in women's retirement experiences. Findings indicate that women have mixed feelings about retirement; they are both excited and fearful. They particularly enjoy the freedom and control this transition brings but are also moderately fearful of retirement, especially about shifting relationships. A better-quality relationship correlates with greater satisfaction and less fear. Such insights can be used to help women prepare for this major transition.


Assuntos
Relações Interpessoais , Acontecimentos que Mudam a Vida , Aposentadoria/psicologia , Idoso , Envelhecimento/psicologia , Medo , Feminino , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Satisfação Pessoal , Pesquisa Qualitativa
2.
J Women Aging ; 28(5): 418-30, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27143397

RESUMO

This is an interview-based study focused on how professional baby boomer women negotiate and narrate postretirement lives. This group came of age in the 1960s and represents a socially privileged segment of the baby boomer generation, a cohort that created new gendered pathways in employment. Today, these retired professional women are attempting to make sense of their multilayered complex and changing realities. In their accounts, the most salient themes are shifting identity, embodiment, and relationships. By using what we call a relational lens, we will show how many aspects of postretirement life, for these professional women, are mediated by changing relationships-relationships to time, work identity, friends and family, and body. Through these individual and relational contexts we see how female professional baby boomer retirees grapple with liberation and loss, autonomy and control, ongoing gendered work, and rebalancing in a new chapter of life. Perhaps most importantly, we see how learning about self in this stage of life, and perhaps across the life course, takes place largely in the context of relationships.


Assuntos
Imagem Corporal , Emprego/psicologia , Relações Interpessoais , Qualidade de Vida , Aposentadoria/psicologia , Idoso , Feminino , Identidade de Gênero , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Pesquisa Qualitativa
3.
Gerontol Geriatr Educ ; 34(1): 26-42, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23362853

RESUMO

This article describes the Digital Life History Project, a 10-week "lab" linked to a course on aging, in which students and community-dwelling elders work together to create a short digital story honoring the elder's life. After two interview sessions, the pair works together to produce a 3- to 5-minute digital life story narrated by the elder. The resulting multimedia videos are then screened for the community at large at the end of the semester. Students and elders alike report long-term personal, interpersonal, and community-based effects from participating in the Digital Life History Project, including making meaningful relationships, linking biography and history, learning to confront ageism, charting the next chapter, and participating in community-wide education.


Assuntos
Pesquisa Participativa Baseada na Comunidade , Geriatria/educação , Relação entre Gerações , Narração , Gravação em Vídeo , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade
4.
Sociol Health Illn ; 32(2): 319-34, 2010 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20149150

RESUMO

This article focuses on women in their nineties (nonagenarians) who are ageing in place - or ageing at home - in upstate New York. I analyse these old women's use of everyday technological tools to care for themselves and construct meaning. I argue that despite what we may expect, nonagenarian women can be and are technogenarians in their active and creative uses of everyday technologies. Old women utilise lifelong care work repertoires to identify, adjust, use and reject old and new technologies for their own everyday mobility, communication, nourishment, and physiological health. Perhaps most importantly techno-savvy elders can maintain and achieve health and wellbeing, associated here with bodily comfort, social networks, self-efficacy and intellectual life, in and beyond their homes. In these ways, nonagenarians can teach us how household technologies can be health and ageing technologies; instruments of continuity and control; or just the opposite.


Assuntos
Adaptação Psicológica , Envelhecimento , Atitude Frente aos Computadores , Comportamento do Consumidor , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , Tecnologia , Fatores Etários , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Antropologia Cultural , Coleta de Dados , Feminino , Felicidade , Nível de Saúde , Humanos , Relações Interpessoais , Saúde da Mulher
5.
Sociol Health Illn ; 32(2): 171-80, 2010 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20415722

RESUMO

Abstract This special monograph issue builds on sociology of health and illness scholarship and expands the analytical lens to examine how old people, healthcare professionals, and technology designers create, use, and modify science and technology to negotiate and define health and illness. Far from passive consumers, elders are technogenarians, creatively utilising and adapting technological artefacts such as walking aids and medications to fit their needs. This publication adds theoretical and empirical depth to our understanding of the multiple and overlapping socio-historical contexts surrounding ageing bodies and ageing enterprises, including the biomedicalisation of ageing that includes the rise of anti-ageing or longevity medicine; and the rise of gerontechnology industries and professions -- fields that largely accept the ageing body as a given. This collection sociologically investigates how and where these two trends overlap and diverge in relation to a global context of ageing and ageism, and calls for further scholarship in this area. Combining science and technology studies and sociology of health and illness frameworks together provides an empirical basis from which to analyse technogenarians in action, as well as the stakeholders and institutions involved in the ageing, health, and technology matrix.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento , Tecnologia Biomédica/tendências , Geriatria/tendências , Nível de Saúde , Preconceito , Fatores Etários , Conhecimentos, Atitudes e Prática em Saúde , Humanos , Ciência/tendências , Sociedades Médicas , Sociologia Médica/tendências
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