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- Title
"Nobody But a Family Member Can Do It Quite the Same Way": Understanding the Meaning of Mealtimes to Residents and Families in Long-Term Care Homes During the Pandemic.
- Authors
Keller, Heather H; Wu, Sarah A; Cammer, Allison; Lengyel, Christina; Harvie, Ruth; O'Rourke, Hannah M; Dakkak, Hana; Trinca, Vanessa; Carrier, Natalie; Slaughter, Susan E
- Abstract
Background and Objectives Meals in long-term care (LTC) are essential to residents not only for nutrition and their physical well-being but also for their social interactions supporting resident quality of life. This study aims to understand the mealtime experiences of residents and family care partners during the coronavirus 2019 disease (COVID-19) pandemic when restrictions were put in place in LTC and retirement homes. Research Design and Methods Interpretive description analysis of qualitative interviews in LTC and retirement homes, with 17 family care partners and 4 residents. Convenience and snowball sampling was used to recruit participants for telephone interviews. Results Three themes were generated. Compromised mealtimes mean compromising community— meals were seen by participants as a key social and community-building event of the home; they reported this loss of community with pandemic restrictions. Participants noted that family care partners are indispensable at meals for social, psychological, and physical support. The dangers of eating alone spoke to the social isolation reported by participants that occurred during the pandemic and the risks they described of eating alone. Discussion and Implications This study confirms the importance of mealtimes in LTC and retirement homes to community building and extends our understanding of the importance of family inclusion at meals and why eating alone, as happened during COVID-19, was so detrimental to residents. Effort needs to be made to value this communal activity for the well-being of residents.
- Subjects
FAMILIES &; psychology; NURSING home patients; QUALITATIVE research; RESEARCH funding; LONG-term health care; STATISTICAL sampling; INTERVIEWING; STAY-at-home orders; NURSING care facilities; FAMILY attitudes; EXPERIENCE; THEMATIC analysis; CAREGIVERS; RESEARCH methodology; QUALITY of life; MEALS; SOCIAL support; INTERPERSONAL relations; COVID-19 pandemic; PSYCHOSOCIAL factors; PATIENTS' attitudes; SOCIAL isolation; NUTRITION; WELL-being
- Publication
Gerontologist, 2024, Vol 64, Issue 6, p1
- ISSN
0016-9013
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/geront/gnad168