| Literature DB >> 31597278 |
Katja Rusinovic1, Marianne van Bochove2, Jolien van de Sande3.
Abstract
Senior co-housing communities offer an in-between solution for older people who do not want to live in an institutional setting but prefer the company of their age peers. Residents of co-housing communities live in their own apartments but undertake activities together and support one another. This paper adds to the literature by scrutinizing the benefits and drawbacks of senior co-housing, with special focus on the forms and limits of social support and the implications for the experience of loneliness. Qualitative fieldwork was conducted in eight co-housing communities in the Netherlands, consisting of document analysis, interviews, focus groups, and observations. The research shows that co-housing communities offer social contacts, social control, and instrumental and emotional support. Residents set boundaries regarding the frequency and intensity of support. The provided support partly relieves residents' adult children from caregiving duties but does not substitute formal and informal care. Due to their access to contacts and support, few residents experience social loneliness. Co-housing communities can potentially also alleviate emotional loneliness, but currently, this happens to a limited degree. The paper concludes with practical recommendations for enhancing the benefits and reducing the drawbacks of senior co-housing.Entities:
Keywords: aging in place; elderly care; informal care; loneliness; senior co-housing communities; social support
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31597278 PMCID: PMC6801586 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16193776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Overview senior collaborative housing initiatives.
| Housing Initiative | Year of Establishment | Residents’ Board | Healthcare Service Provided | Multi-Generation Home | City | Number of Respondents |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| H1 | 1994 | Yes | No | No | The Hague | 6 |
| H2 | 2007 | Yes | No | No | The Hague | 6 |
| H3 | 1997 | Yes | No | No | The Hague | 3 |
| H4 | 1998 | Yes | No | No | The Hague | 5 |
| H5 | 1998 | Yes | No | No | The Hague | 1 |
| H6 | 2017 | No | Yes | No | Rotterdam | 2 |
| H7 | 2012 | No | Yes | Yes | Deventer | 4 |
| H8 | 2017 | No | No | No | The Hague | 5 |
Overview of the fieldwork.
| Fieldwork | N |
|---|---|
| Interviews with key informants | 17 |
| Interviews with residents | 32 |
| Interviews with (in)formal caregivers | 6 |
| Focus group interviews | 2 |
| Observations in common spaces | 6 |
Overview benefits and drawbacks of co-housing.
| Benefits | Drawbacks |
|---|---|
| Social contacts and shared activities | Social exclusion; adjustment challenges for newcomers |
| Social control; looking out for one another | Limited freedom due to strict rules and norms; paternalism |
| Instrumental and emotional support; easing the burden of family caregivers | Boundaries based on frequency and intensity of support; distinctions between deserving/ undeserving residents |
| Diminishing social loneliness and alleviating emotional loneliness | Experience of boundaries in sharing feelings of emptiness |