Tijs Vandemeulebroucke1, Bernadette Dierckx de Casterlé2, Laura Welbergen3, Michiel Massart4, Chris Gastmans1. 1. Centre for Biomedical Ethics and Law, KU Leuven-University of Leuven, Belgium. 2. Academic Centre for Nursing and Midwifery, Department of Public Health and Primary Care, KU Leuven-University of Leuven, Belgium. 3. Afdeling Beleid en Kwaliteit, Handtherapie Nederland, Utrecht, The Netherlands. 4. Social Work-Research, PXL University College, Hasselt, Belgium.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Socially assistive robots (SARs) need to be studied from older adults' perspective, given their predicted future ubiquity in aged-care settings. Current ethical discourses on SARs in aged care are uninformed by primary stakeholders' ethical perceptions. This study reports on what community-dwelling older adults in Flanders, Belgium, perceive as ethical issues of SARs in aged care. METHODS: Constructivist grounded theory guided the study of 9 focus groups of 59 community-dwelling older adults (70+ years) in Flanders, Belgium. An open-ended topic guide and a modified Alice Cares documentary focused discussions. The Qualitative Analysis Guide of Leuven (QUAGOL) guided data analysis. RESULTS: Data revealed older adults' multidimensional perceptions on the ethics of SARs which were structured along three sections: (a) SARs as components of a techno-societal evolution, (b) SARs' embeddedness in aged-care dynamics, (c) SARs as embodiments of ethical considerations. DISCUSSION: Perceptions sociohistorically contextualize the ethics of SAR use by older adults' views on societal, organizational, and relational contexts in which aged care takes place. These contexts need to inform the ethical criteria for the design, development, and use of SARs. Focusing on older adults' ethical perceptions creates "normativity in place," viewing participants as moral subjects.
OBJECTIVES: Socially assistive robots (SARs) need to be studied from older adults' perspective, given their predicted future ubiquity in aged-care settings. Current ethical discourses on SARs in aged care are uninformed by primary stakeholders' ethical perceptions. This study reports on what community-dwelling older adults in Flanders, Belgium, perceive as ethical issues of SARs in aged care. METHODS: Constructivist grounded theory guided the study of 9 focus groups of 59 community-dwelling older adults (70+ years) in Flanders, Belgium. An open-ended topic guide and a modified Alice Cares documentary focused discussions. The Qualitative Analysis Guide of Leuven (QUAGOL) guided data analysis. RESULTS: Data revealed older adults' multidimensional perceptions on the ethics of SARs which were structured along three sections: (a) SARs as components of a techno-societal evolution, (b) SARs' embeddedness in aged-care dynamics, (c) SARs as embodiments of ethical considerations. DISCUSSION: Perceptions sociohistorically contextualize the ethics of SAR use by older adults' views on societal, organizational, and relational contexts in which aged care takes place. These contexts need to inform the ethical criteria for the design, development, and use of SARs. Focusing on older adults' ethical perceptions creates "normativity in place," viewing participants as moral subjects.