Dignity in elderly care : meaning and legal protection

We are living increasingly longer in a society that is struggling to define how to treat the very old, particularly those in care homes. The concept of dignity can guide how an older individual in care ought to be treated. In this dissertation I argue for an understanding of dignity that is built ar...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Knight, Julie
Published: University of Reading 2018
Subjects:
340
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.741120
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-741120
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7411202019-03-05T15:45:09ZDignity in elderly care : meaning and legal protectionKnight, Julie2018We are living increasingly longer in a society that is struggling to define how to treat the very old, particularly those in care homes. The concept of dignity can guide how an older individual in care ought to be treated. In this dissertation I argue for an understanding of dignity that is built around the views of the persons cared for, and for the introduction of laws and policies aimed at creating conditions amenable to its realisation. Dignity must be viewed as rooted in our concrete autonomy, one that sees us embodied and embedded in the connections we make with others throughout our lives. Dignity, understood according to the views of the individual cared for, is aligned with this relational view of autonomy, one that prompts us to understand the individual through dialogical engagement. In order to realise the kind of dignity that matters to elderly individuals in care, it is essential to address a number of negative factors, including through law and policies. Addressing these factors means taking concrete steps towards converting potential dignity into actual dignity. One of these 'conversion factors' of dignity is vulnerability. In order for this personal conversion factor to be conducive to dignity, vulnerability ought to be conceptualised as inherent, universal and relational. Another conversion factor, this time environmental, is the regulatory system that controls care homes: for dignity to flourish, those affected by this system must be involved in its elaboration and monitoring. On a social level exists the conversion factor of ageism. Generational rapprochement is one way in which to help reduce it. This dissertation examines whether and how legal means responsive to these conversion factors help or hinder the creation of conditions amenable to dignity in long term aged care.340University of Readinghttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.741120http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/77334/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 340
spellingShingle 340
Knight, Julie
Dignity in elderly care : meaning and legal protection
description We are living increasingly longer in a society that is struggling to define how to treat the very old, particularly those in care homes. The concept of dignity can guide how an older individual in care ought to be treated. In this dissertation I argue for an understanding of dignity that is built around the views of the persons cared for, and for the introduction of laws and policies aimed at creating conditions amenable to its realisation. Dignity must be viewed as rooted in our concrete autonomy, one that sees us embodied and embedded in the connections we make with others throughout our lives. Dignity, understood according to the views of the individual cared for, is aligned with this relational view of autonomy, one that prompts us to understand the individual through dialogical engagement. In order to realise the kind of dignity that matters to elderly individuals in care, it is essential to address a number of negative factors, including through law and policies. Addressing these factors means taking concrete steps towards converting potential dignity into actual dignity. One of these 'conversion factors' of dignity is vulnerability. In order for this personal conversion factor to be conducive to dignity, vulnerability ought to be conceptualised as inherent, universal and relational. Another conversion factor, this time environmental, is the regulatory system that controls care homes: for dignity to flourish, those affected by this system must be involved in its elaboration and monitoring. On a social level exists the conversion factor of ageism. Generational rapprochement is one way in which to help reduce it. This dissertation examines whether and how legal means responsive to these conversion factors help or hinder the creation of conditions amenable to dignity in long term aged care.
author Knight, Julie
author_facet Knight, Julie
author_sort Knight, Julie
title Dignity in elderly care : meaning and legal protection
title_short Dignity in elderly care : meaning and legal protection
title_full Dignity in elderly care : meaning and legal protection
title_fullStr Dignity in elderly care : meaning and legal protection
title_full_unstemmed Dignity in elderly care : meaning and legal protection
title_sort dignity in elderly care : meaning and legal protection
publisher University of Reading
publishDate 2018
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.741120
work_keys_str_mv AT knightjulie dignityinelderlycaremeaningandlegalprotection
_version_ 1718996482877554688