Abstract
A nutritious and enjoyable eating experience is important to achieve good health and well-being in old age. Procuring, preparing, and consuming food is important in people’s lives and identity construction. Meals add a sense of meaning and structure to an older adult’s day, providing the feeling of independence and control and are based on their agency. In this contribution, we focus on the choices that older people have in their eating habits. We focus on frail older people, with varying degrees of disability, dependent on care. Based on a secondary analysis of interviews with older people in care homes and in-home environments dependent on care, we explore how different care regimes in the Czech Republic limit or support the identity of older adults associated with their eating habits, and how they can exercise agency to achieve satisfactory forms of their eating. Meals in care homes in the Czech Republic are strictly regulated by hygiene standards, and client and food safety are prioritized over the qualitative or identity-forming elements of food, as well as over the promotion of clients’ self-sufficiency. The nutritional aspect of the diet is emphasised. However, even within these care regimes, older adults apply different strategies to meet their needs regarding their meal’s composition and timing. These strategies are pursued in this paper. This work was supported by the Czech Science Foundation (GAČR), project No. GA23-06348S (Meanings of food intake in old age).
Presenters
Marcela Petrova KafkovaResearcher, Centre for Research on Ageing, Masaryk University Brno, Czech Republic
Details
Presentation Type
Paper Presentation in a Themed Session
Theme
Ensuring Quality Long-Term Care
KEYWORDS
OLER ADULTS; FOOD; SOCIAL MEANING OF FOOD; IDENTITY; AGENCY; SELF-SUFFIENCY