| Literature DB >> 31802884 |
Veralia Gabriela Sánchez1, Camilla Anker-Hansen2, Ingrid Taylor3, Grethe Eilertsen3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Norway, as in other European countries, the ageing population is increasing rapidly. Governments seek to enable older people stay in their homes for as long as possible, and welfare technology (WT) has been proposed as a possible solution. Human behaviour modelling (HBM) is a welfare technology that identifies an individual's behaviour patterns and detects abnormal behaviours, including falls and early signs of dementia. However, the successful development of HBM WT requires the consideration of the older people's attitudes on this. AIM: The present study sought to explore attitudes and perspectives about welfare technology among older people living alone in Norway.Entities:
Keywords: ageing in place; ambient assistive living; assistive technology; ethical challenges; healthcare; human behaviour
Year: 2019 PMID: 31802884 PMCID: PMC6801567 DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S219458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Multidiscip Healthc ISSN: 1178-2390
Demographic Characteristics
| Participant | Gender | Age | Civil status | Type Of House | Years Living Alone | Years In Current House |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | Female | 91 | Widow | Senior apartment | No data | 22 years |
| P2 | Male | 79 | Widow | Own house | 2 years | 49 years |
| P3 | Male | 80 | Widow | Senior apartment | 6 years | 2 years |
| P4 | Male | 79 | Widow | Own house | 14 years | 14 years |
| P5 | Male | 79 | Widow | Own house | 1.5 years | No data |
| P6 | Female | 83 | Divorced | Own house | 60 years | 13 years |
| P7 | Female | 84 | Widow | Apartment | 11 years | 20 years |
| P8 | Female | 84 | Widow | Own house | 10 years | 52 years |
| P9 | Female | 89 | Widow | Senior apartment | 16 years | 7 years |
Figure 1Semi-structured interview questionnaire guide.
Example Of The Analysis Procedure From A Manifest To A Latent Level
| Manifest Level | Latent Level | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meaning Units | Condensed Meaning Unit | Code | Sub-Categories | Categories |
| There is a nurse that comes just to deliver pills to my neighbour four times a day, it is not nice, but it is worse to have a machine for that | Home care nurse delivering pills is better than technology | Technology care should not replace human care | Concerns and dilemmas | Preferences and concerns of welfare technology |
| I am very careful, I always have my mobile in my night table and with me, even when I go to the bathroom in the night just in case I could fall or anything happens | Carrying phone to be able to call in case of emergency or falling | Having an action plan in case of emergency | Facing own ageing- preparedness for unpredictable scenarios | Reflections of today and tomorrow- awareness of own health |
Number Of Meaning Units, Codes, Sub-Categories And Categories Throughout The Four Main Analysis Steps
| Meaning Units | Codes | Sub-Categories | Categories | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Analysis 1 | 981 | 85 | 19 | 4 |
| Analysis 2 | 981 | 76 | 13 | 4 |
| Analysis 3 | 615 | 52 | 7 | 3 |
| Analysis 4 (Final) |
Subcategories, Categories, And Main Theme
| Sub-Categories Categories | Main Theme | |
|---|---|---|
| i. Feeling confident- proactive approach to future technology | I. Preferences and concerns of welfare technology | Welfare technology - a valuable addition to tomorrow’s homes |
| ii. Concerns and dilemmas | ||
| i. Feeling healthy, independent, self-sufficient and safe | II. Reflections of today and tomorrow- awareness of own health | |
| ii. Facing own ageing- preparedness for unpredictable scenarios | ||