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  • Age and ageing

Age and ageing

In the Age and Ageing research area, we bring together individuals from a range of disciplinary backgrounds committed to understanding the lived experiences of ageing and old age. We have strong policy and practice links with community and statutory organisations both through commissioned work and joint initiatives. 

We are interested in a range of theoretical approaches and critical perspectives underpinned by notions of social justice and challenging ageism. As applied researchers we have expertise in co-researching with older people, co-design, evaluation and arts-based creative approaches.

Our areas of interest include:

  • care ethics
  • wellbeing
  • dementia
  • technology and ageing
  • challenging ageism.
Old age is not an illness - we are challenging the commonly held view that it is through exploring personal, social and cultural perspectives on ageing.

By 2035 people aged 65 and over will account for 23 per cent of the UK population (ONS, 2012). Within this group, the numbers of people over 85 – sometimes called the ‘oldest old’ is growing faster than any other.

This growth in population ageing is often framed as a demographic time bomb, which will create an unaffordable ‘burden’ on society and health and care resources. But what do we know about the experiences of ageing and living into old age? How can older people’s voices challenge negative stereotypes and assumptions about old age?

We are committed to researching contemporary critical challenges in relation to the psychosocial aspects of ageing, social relations and the lived experiences of growing older.

Bunty-Bateman

Bunty Bateman, Co-researcher

I have discovered that the impact of chronological age does not affect people uniformly; rather that this transition is very much an individual thing. As a result of my involvement – in modern jargon – I have been empowered, or in my terms, given the confidence to realise that I still have something to contribute to society.

Bunty Bateman, Co-researcher

Care ethics

Care is a contested concept and can refer to services, practices, relationships and values. It is central to people’s wellbeing, resisted because of an association with dependence and necessary to social justice in conditions of vulnerability. Care ethics recognise the significance of care to both personal relationships and political decisions, and names care as a matter of morality as well as service delivery.

We are developing research using feminist care ethics to explore the significance of care in relation to ageing, older people and intergenerational relationships. This includes thinking about our own participatory research practice with older co-researchers as not just a matter of good research design, but of ethical practice. Care ethics start from a recognition that human beings need other people to survive and flourish and that we all need care. It goes on to suggest how ‘care thinking’ offers a way of thinking about what is necessary to achieve social justice, as well as what caring relationships look like. Interest in care ethics is growing internationally and across disciplinary fields. We are contributing to these developments and applying care ethics to lived experience, service delivery and policy. We held a major international conference in 2012 attracting over 100 academics and practitioners from 17 countries.

Care-ethics-social-justice-Diana

Research projects

Older people: care and self-funding experiences

Understanding ethical dimensions of self-funded care through lived experiences of older people, their carers, care providers and commissioners

Wellbeing

We have been working in partnership with Age UK 映客直播 and Hove for a number of years developing participatory research with older co-researchers that contributes to older people’s wellbeing. Relationships with families, friends, strangers, and service providers are vital to wellbeing in old age. Inter-generational relationships between older and younger people are increasingly the focus of policy in areas such as social welfare and the design of urban spaces. Our work explores the lived experience of changing relationships amongst older and younger people, as well as the significance of values such as care, reciprocity and trust in relationships between older people and those who support and care for them, and in shaping public policy for an ageing society. 

With funding from the ESRC we set up a Knowledge Exchange with older people and social care practitioners to develop learning resources from the research findings. These are being used in social care practice and for those working or supporting older people.

Age-wellbeing-section

Research projects

Older people, wellbeing and participation

Using our research to produce a range of films and a handbook for those who work with older people

As time goes by

Thoughts on wellbeing in later life - a follow on from the Older people, wellbeing and participation research project

Older people with sight loss in care homes

A study aimed at improving understanding about good standards of care and practice for older people with sight loss in care homes                                      

East Sussex carers' breaks

An evaluation of the demonstrator site

Working towards prevention

Evaluation of the West Sussex Partnerships for Older People Project (POPP)

LifeLines

An evaluation of a prevention programme with older people

Cheers!

A project about older people and alcohol

Through our research on ageing and with older people themselves – their voices talking about that experience are being heard. We are developing collaborative methodologies to enable older people’s experience to impact on the development of policy and the redesign of services

Dr Lizzie Ward, Senior Research Fellow

Dementia

We research the maintenance of identity and relationships for people with dementia and how they are enabled and supported to stay connected with their lives and networks. This has involved us in research on creative ways of working including art therapy and dance movement work, the role of information in care relationships and currently in the role of self-management for people with recent diagnosis.

We have established connections with organisations and groups active in developing user involvement with people with dementia. We are working in partnership with the Alzheimer’s Society as evaluators and with practitioners in care settings to develop this body of work.

Research projects

Carer Information and Support Programme (CrISP)

A study of how an information and support programme for family carers of people with dementia impacted on the caring relationship

Dance and dementia 

A pilot study to explore the impact of dance on relationships for people with dementia

Living well with dementia evaluation

An evaluation of the Living Well with Dementia (LWwD) programme.

Technology and ageing

Older people can both contribute to and benefit from cultural and technological innovation. Technology has an increasing role to play in the lives of older people, helping transcend the physical limitations on accessing spaces beyond the home, or assistive technologies that can reduce the impact of physical frailty. We are contributing to such developments through a number of different projects.

Computing-wide

Research projects

Older people’s experiences of online and offline communities 

An investigation into what motivates older people to engage with online communities and the ongoing effect on local community involvement.

Material traces

A collaboration with older residents of Newhaven to develop interactive technologies for their local community

Challenging ageism

‘Active ageing’ has become a key plank of public health policy as people are living longer, often with chronic conditions, and as politicians debate the ‘burden’ of the ageing population and the cost of providing appropriate long-term care to such people. At the same time, lifestyle media (LSM) - such as TV makeover programmes - often aimed at women, encourage active engagement in activities that are presented as slowing the process of ageing, framing such engagements as ‘healthy’. We are developing research that addresses the need to develop theoretical and methodological tools to interrogate how ‘active ageing’ is mobilised - both within and across policy and lifestyle media - and with what consequences.

Challenging-ageing-Tai-Chi

Research team

Laura Banks

Dr Dennis Greenwood

Dr Helen Johnson

Professor Diane Waller OBE

External members

Professor Marian Barnes, Emeritus Professor of Social Policy

Dr Beatrice Gahagan, Honorary Research Fellow and Health and Wellbeing Manager, Age UK 映客直播 and Hove

PhD Students

Avneet Bakshi, Doctoral Student

Gigliola Brintazoli, Doctoral Student

Cara Redlich, Doctoral Student

Outputs

Raisborough, Jayne, Barnes, Marian, Henwood, Flis and Ward, Elizabeth (2014) Media Culture & Society, 36 (8). pp. 1069-1083.

Barnes, M, Henwood, F and Smith, N (2014), Information and care: A relational approach, Dementia: The International Journal of Social Research and Practice, DOI:10.1177/1471301214527750 

Barnes, M, Taylor, D, and Ward, L (2013) Being well enough in old age, Critical Social Policy, 33, pp. 473-493. 

Barnes, M (2012) Care in Everyday Life: an ethic of care in practice. Bristol, Policy Press.

Barnes, M (2012) , Families, Relationships and Societies, 1 (1) pp. 7-24.

Smith, N and Barnes, M (2012), New jobs old roles – working for prevention in a whole-system model of health and social care for older people. Health and Social Care in the Community, 21 (1) pp. 79-87

Ward, L and Gahagan, B (2012)  ‘Involving older people: empowering engagement?’ in Barnes, M and Cotterell, P (eds) Critical perspectives on User Involvement, Bristol, The Policy Press. 

Axelrod, L, Fitzpatrick, G, Harley, D, White, G and McAllister,G (2011) In: Proceedings of Interactive Technologies and Games: Education, Health and Disability 2011, 25-26 October, Nottingham Trent University, UK.

Barnes, M (2011) ‘Abandoning care? A critical perspective on personalisation from an ethic of care’ Ethics and Social Welfare, 5 (2) pp.153-167. 

Harley, D, Fitzpatrick, G, Vetere, F, and Kurniawan, S (Eds.) (2011) The Intergenerational  Context as an Emphasis for Design. [Special Issue] Universal Access in the Information Society (23 June 2011), pp. 1-5. 

Ward, L, Barnes, M and Gahagan, B (2011) ‘Alcohol use in later life: older people’s perspectives’, Quality in Ageing and Older People, 12 (4) pp.239-247. 

Harley, D, Fitzpatrick, G, Axelrod, L, White, G and McAllister, G (2010) In: 6th Symposium of the Workgroup Human-Computer Interaction and Usability Engineering, USAB 2010, 4-5 November, Klagenfurt, Austria,. 

Haynes, P, Hill, M and Banks, L (2010) Older people's family contacts and long-term care expenditure in OECD countries: a comparative approach using qualitative comparative analysis. Social Policy & Administration, 44 (1) pp. 67-84.

Ward, L and Gahagan, B (2010) Crossing the Divide between Theory and Practice: Research and an Ethic of Care. Ethics and Social Welfare, 4 (2), pp. 210-216

Sources/links

Age Concern’s Wii Bowling League - Research focusing on the appropriation of Nintendo Wii™ gaming consoles by older people in sheltered housing schemes in 映客直播 as part of an Age Concern initiative to promote physical and social activity in these settings. 

Reduced Horizons - a study which follows on from the Growing Older, Being Heard looking at ways in which technology might address issues of isolation amongst a group of older people in Newhaven, Peacehaven and 映客直播, undertaken with the Meridian Mature Citizens Forum and Dr Elizabeth Harrison, University of Sussex.

Collaborations

Age UK 映客直播 and Hove

Alzheimer’s Society

映客直播 & Hove City Council

映客直播 & Hove Older People’s Council

East Sussex County Council

East Sussex Seniors Association

Guild Care Worthing

Meridian Mature Citizens Forum

The Martlets Hospice

University of Sussex

Funding

Developing a Knowledge Exchange on Older People's Involvement with an Ethic of Care ESRC £85,000 (Grant ref. ES/J001058/1)

External evaluation of the Alzheimer’s Society Live Well with Dementia Programme £52,000

Evaluation of the Alzheimer’s Society Carer Information and Support Programme (CrISP) £24,000

Evaluation of East Sussex Demonstrator site: Breaks for Carers £44,000

Evaluation of Lifelines (Invest to Save programme) £50,000

Evaluation of the West Sussex POPPS (Partnerships for Older People Project) £71,000

Awards/recognition/impact

Research and Innovation Award 2009. Staff award for Group Research ‘Cheers!? A project about older people and alcohol’.

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