FACILITATING ACTIVE AGEING: A SOCIAL WORK INTERVENTION WITH INSTITUTIONALISED OLDER ADULTS

Authors

  • Laxmi Putran Central University of Kerala
  • Mohan A Kunder Central University of Kerala
  • Anoop C Choolayil Central University of Kerala

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15270/60-2-1295

Keywords:

older adults, care homes, active ageing, play therapy, mental health education

Abstract

Older adults in many developing nations move to care homes for reasons other than ill health, but the institutional routines, paired with the separation from families, may curtail their autonomy and choices, adversely affecting their active ageing prospects. This study introduced a novel social work intervention that targeted individual-level, personnel-level and institutional-level modifications to improve the active ageing prospects of institutionalised older adults. A total of 35 participants (16 males and 19 females) were recruited from seven care homes in Kerala, India. The active ageing status of the participants significantly improved after the intervention (137.77±45.1) compared to that before the intervention (128±44.2). The findings show that structural and personnel changes in the institution, combined with individual and family-level interventions, can improve the active ageing prospects of institutionalised older adults in developing nations, where institutionalisation is not always necessarily a consequence of ill health.

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Author Biographies

Laxmi Putran, Central University of Kerala

Department of Social Work

Mohan A Kunder, Central University of Kerala

Department of Social Work

Anoop C Choolayil, Central University of Kerala

Department of Social Work

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Published

2024-06-14

How to Cite

Putran, L., Kunder, M. A., & Choolayil, A. C. (2024). FACILITATING ACTIVE AGEING: A SOCIAL WORK INTERVENTION WITH INSTITUTIONALISED OLDER ADULTS. Social Work/Maatskaplike Werk, 60(2), 219–238. https://doi.org/10.15270/60-2-1295

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Section

Articles