Circle dance: integrative and complementary practice in the daily health promotion for older adults

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Abstract

Objectives: to understand circle dance as an integrative and complementary practice for health promotion in older adults’ daily lives. Methods: an interpretive, qualitative study, based on Michel Maffesoli’s Comprehensive Sociology of Everyday Life. There were 20 participants, 17 older adults and three focalizers in circles held in Basic Health Units in a municipality in southern Brazil. Data were collected through interviews and observation, between September 2016 and March 2017, and analyzed through preliminary analysis, ordering, key links, coding and categorization. Results: three categories emerged that express the daily life of circle dance with older adults: circles that spin; challenges for new circles to spin; entering, being and staying in the circle. Final Considerations: circle dance provided older adults with a feeling of belonging to a group, combined with pleasure and well-being, contributing to promotion of older adults’ health.

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da Silva, K. M., Nitschke, R. G., Durand, M. K., Heidemann, I. T. S. B., Tholl, A. D., Rumor, P. C. F., & Moncada, M. J. A. (2022). Circle dance: integrative and complementary practice in the daily health promotion for older adults. Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem, 75. https://doi.org/10.1590/0034-7167-2021-0003

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