Do senior women with family members who live nearby really need friends as much as senior women without family members living nearby? According to this research, they do. Reported in the “Journal of Gerontological Nursing,” a study by the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls examined the role of friends in predicting loneliness among women over age 65 who lived alone. Researchers hypothesized that those women who didn’t have family members living nearby would be lonelier than those who did. Well, that didn’t happen. It turns out that “close friends were important for women living alone, regardless of whether they had family living locally.” This information is noteworthy because it emphasizes the need for making social connections a priority in the lives of older women who live alone, regardless of their local family connections.
This video titled "Knitting Together" showcases a group of older women who socialize through weekly knitting sessions. A woman shares near the end, “I’m here to enjoy the company.”
Frances Shani Parker, Author
"Becoming Dead Right: A Hospice Volunteer in Urban Nursing Homes”
“Hospice and Nursing Homes Blog”
Frances Shani Parker, eldercare consultant and Detroit, Michigan author of Becoming Dead Right: A Hospice Volunteer in Urban Nursing Homes, writes this blog. Topics include eldercare, hospice, nursing homes, caregiving, dementia, death, bereavement, and older adults in general. News, practices, research, poems, stories, interviews, and videos are used often. In the top right column, you can search for various topics of interest to you. You can also subscribe to this blog or follow it by email.
Showing posts with label Friendship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Friendship. Show all posts
Sunday, June 14, 2009
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