Sexual activity in nursing homes
is the elephant in the room that many staff and family members don’t want to recognize. With the increasing numbers of
baby boomers, including those with dementia, Alzheimer’s, the elephant is
growing fast, sitting widely in their laps, and poking its trunk in their
reluctant faces.
In 1995, the Hebrew Home in Rivedale, New York, wrote
the nation’s first sexual rights policy for older adults in healthcare
settings. This policy has been updated recently, particularly regarding
dementia, sexuality, and sexual activity consent. Nursing home guidelines are
crucial in assisting healthcare staff in making appropriate judgments on these
matters.
Without guidelines, many staff members reflect their own biases,
particularly regarding older residents with dementia. Examples are discomfort,
denial, and other resistance by some staff members when they are confronted
with the sexual behavior of these residents in long-term care facilities. Nursing staff research involving an extensive search of electronic databases and
reported in the International Journal of Nursing Studies revealed the following:
1) Nursing staff shows rather
positive attitudes toward later-life sexuality.
2)
The extent of the staff’s knowledge regarding sexuality in the aged seemed
to be very limited.
3) Staff caregivers hold rather
conservative attitudes toward sexuality of institutionalized elderly.
4)
Responses to residents' sexual behavior were influenced by the nursing
staff’s own level of comfort related to sexuality issues and the culture within
the institution where they work.
In the following video, general concerns about sexual activity among nursing home residents are explained.
Frances Shani Parker,
Author
Becoming Dead Right: A Hospice Volunteer in Urban Nursing Homes is
available in paperback and e-book editions in America and other countries.
Hospice and Nursing Homes Blog