A gendered lifecourse examination of sleep difficulties among older women

Recent research has suggested that understanding and addressing the high prevalence of sleep difficulties in older women requires going beyond a purely physiological focus to address the role of social contextual pressures and demands. We take a gendered lifecourse approach to explore how sleep diff...

Повний опис

Бібліографічні деталі
Автори: Walker, R, Luszcz, M, Hislop, J, Moore, V
Формат: Journal article
Мова:English
Опубліковано: 2012
_version_ 1826263028487684096
author Walker, R
Luszcz, M
Hislop, J
Moore, V
author_facet Walker, R
Luszcz, M
Hislop, J
Moore, V
author_sort Walker, R
collection OXFORD
description Recent research has suggested that understanding and addressing the high prevalence of sleep difficulties in older women requires going beyond a purely physiological focus to address the role of social contextual pressures and demands. We take a gendered lifecourse approach to explore how sleep difficulties have evolved and how their management might reflect the position of older women in society more broadly. We conducted in-depth interviews with 12 oldest-old (average age 86) community-dwelling women who currently experienced sleep difficulties. Five themes emerged from the analysis: significant life stages; contingent lives; daily concerns in relation to ageing; attitudes and responses of women and general practitioners; and stigma and sleeping pills, which provided a conceptual framework through which to explain the reality of sleep difficulties for these women. For all women, sleep difficulties were not related to physical aspects such as pain or discomfort, but were largely shaped by demands associated with family relationships at different times in the lifecourse. Furthermore, our findings suggest that responses by women themselves, and health professionals, reflect a sense of stigma around sleep difficulties and use of sleeping pills. More emphasis on the social contextual explanations underpinning sleep difficulties might lead to better prevention and treatment of such problems, and increase quality of life. © 2011 Cambridge University Press.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T19:45:11Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:220d9c19-3d56-4147-9aef-2d26977e61f9
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T19:45:11Z
publishDate 2012
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:220d9c19-3d56-4147-9aef-2d26977e61f92022-03-26T11:36:36ZA gendered lifecourse examination of sleep difficulties among older womenJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:220d9c19-3d56-4147-9aef-2d26977e61f9EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2012Walker, RLuszcz, MHislop, JMoore, VRecent research has suggested that understanding and addressing the high prevalence of sleep difficulties in older women requires going beyond a purely physiological focus to address the role of social contextual pressures and demands. We take a gendered lifecourse approach to explore how sleep difficulties have evolved and how their management might reflect the position of older women in society more broadly. We conducted in-depth interviews with 12 oldest-old (average age 86) community-dwelling women who currently experienced sleep difficulties. Five themes emerged from the analysis: significant life stages; contingent lives; daily concerns in relation to ageing; attitudes and responses of women and general practitioners; and stigma and sleeping pills, which provided a conceptual framework through which to explain the reality of sleep difficulties for these women. For all women, sleep difficulties were not related to physical aspects such as pain or discomfort, but were largely shaped by demands associated with family relationships at different times in the lifecourse. Furthermore, our findings suggest that responses by women themselves, and health professionals, reflect a sense of stigma around sleep difficulties and use of sleeping pills. More emphasis on the social contextual explanations underpinning sleep difficulties might lead to better prevention and treatment of such problems, and increase quality of life. © 2011 Cambridge University Press.
spellingShingle Walker, R
Luszcz, M
Hislop, J
Moore, V
A gendered lifecourse examination of sleep difficulties among older women
title A gendered lifecourse examination of sleep difficulties among older women
title_full A gendered lifecourse examination of sleep difficulties among older women
title_fullStr A gendered lifecourse examination of sleep difficulties among older women
title_full_unstemmed A gendered lifecourse examination of sleep difficulties among older women
title_short A gendered lifecourse examination of sleep difficulties among older women
title_sort gendered lifecourse examination of sleep difficulties among older women
work_keys_str_mv AT walkerr agenderedlifecourseexaminationofsleepdifficultiesamongolderwomen
AT luszczm agenderedlifecourseexaminationofsleepdifficultiesamongolderwomen
AT hislopj agenderedlifecourseexaminationofsleepdifficultiesamongolderwomen
AT moorev agenderedlifecourseexaminationofsleepdifficultiesamongolderwomen
AT walkerr genderedlifecourseexaminationofsleepdifficultiesamongolderwomen
AT luszczm genderedlifecourseexaminationofsleepdifficultiesamongolderwomen
AT hislopj genderedlifecourseexaminationofsleepdifficultiesamongolderwomen
AT moorev genderedlifecourseexaminationofsleepdifficultiesamongolderwomen