Publication | Open Access
Occupational Disruption during the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Lived Experience of Community-Dwelling Older Adults
18
Citations
24
References
2021
Year
Daily ActivitiesGeriatric PsychiatryFamily MedicineIndependent LivingCommunity-dwelling Older AdultsHealth PsychologySocial Determinants Of HealthMental HealthOccupational DisruptionGeriatric MedicineCovid-19Social HealthOccupational DiseasePublic HealthGeriatricsAdult Behavioral HealthAbrupt Occupational DisruptionCovid-19 PandemicElderly CareSocial GerontologyGlobal AgingMultilevel ModelingAbrupt DisruptionEpidemiologyMental Health NursingWorkplace Health SurveillanceHealth BehaviorAdult Mental HealthLived ExperienceActive AgeingMedicine
Abstract This qualitative descriptive study presents the experience of an abrupt disruption of daily activities among community-dwelling older adults during the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Sixteen older adults (age: 71 ± 6.4) were interviewed in April–June, 2020. Five themes were identified: (1) Understanding and applying COVID-19 guidelines: guidelines were clear and participants adhered closely to them, motivated mainly by fear; ageing-specific guidelines are needed. (2) Daily life during lockdown: the abrupt occupational disruption was managed by transitioning to virtual activities, and/or performing more activities at home. New daily activities were generally more sedentary and less meaningful. (3) Social context: family assistance aroused mixed feelings, as it compromised independence; limited compliance at the community level created stress. (4) Mood and affect: mood often fluctuated, and participants employed various coping strategies. (5) Aging: participants became more aware of their age and were concerned about negative health implications of adherence to COVID-19 guidelines.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1