"i stand alone." An ethnodrama about the (dis)connections between a client and professionals in a residential care home

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Abstract

Client participation in elderly care organizations requires shifting traditional power relations and establishing communicative action that involves the lifeworlds of clients and professionals alike. This article describes a particular form of client participation in which one client was part of a team of professionals in a residential care home. Their joint remit was to plan the implementation of a new personal care file for residents. We describe the interactions within this team through an ethnodrama, based on participant observations and the embodied presence of the researcher (first author). The narratives and voices of all team members are dramatized in this ethnodrama. Throughout the project the team members experienced confusion relating to the confrontation between lifeworld and system, as experienced by the client and professionals in the team. We analyze these tensions by making use of a Habermasian theoretical framework. We conclude that forms for collective client participation in residential care homes should be developed based on communicative action between clients and professionals, with room for emotional engagement. © 2012 The Author(s).

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APA

Baur, V., Abma, T., & Baart, I. (2014). “i stand alone.” An ethnodrama about the (dis)connections between a client and professionals in a residential care home. Health Care Analysis, 22(3), 272–291. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10728-012-0203-6

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