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Intentions not enough to protect Older Women
who live alone, MU Researcher finds
COLUMBIA, Mo. - Older women who live alone
are vulnerable to unwanted intrusions in
their homes, according to the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. Caregivers
of older women often evaluate crime risk and
home security, but fail to identify women's
intentions to reduce intrusion risk.
In a new study, a University of Missouri
professor has found that in order to feel
safe at home, older women need to recognize
safety risks and perceive themselves as
capable of preventing intrusions.
"Older women's intentions to ensure
accessibility to their homes for family,
friends, and neighbors can override their
concerns about preventing intrusions," said
Eileen Porter, professor in the
Sinclair School of Nursing.
"Health care providers need to engage older
women in conversations about the risks they
perceive and their intentions to reduce
those risks."
Previously, researchers had not evaluated
the use of intention as a component of home
safety assessments. The findings of this
study reveal the need for safety
interventions to supplement basic safety
tips, Porter said.
"To ensure that older people avoid
victimization at home, health care providers
often focus on providing recommendations
such as locking the doors and installing
security systems," Porter said.
"However, it is not enough to ask if they
are locking their doors, because the meaning
of that term varies among people.
Some women, who affirm that they are
‘locking the door,' are locking their front
door at night and during certain seasons of
the year, but otherwise leaving front and
back doors unlocked."
Older homebound women who express worry
about intrusions can benefit from carrying a
portable phone or subscribing to a personal
emergency response system, Porter said.
Women who own portable phones but do not
carry them can benefit from conversations
about why they choose not to carry phones
and questions about how they would reach
help quickly if potential situations arise.
"Caregivers and nurses should develop
individualized safety interventions based on
older women's intentions to protect
themselves and reduce intrusion risks,"
Porter said.
"Nurses should conduct multiple interviews
and ask questions about safety perceptions,
potential reasons for reaching help quickly
and how to reach help immediately."
Porter interviewed 40 homebound women, ages
85 to 95 and living alone, about their
perceptions of feeling safe at home and
precautions to protect themselves.
The women reported various intentions about
reducing intrusion risk, perceived
capabilities in intrusion situations, and
frequency of carrying devices that enable
them to reach help quickly.
Their main intentions to reduce risks at
home were keeping watch, keeping out of
harm's way, preventing theft and vandalism,
discouraging people who might want to get
in, and keeping those people out.
Porter says these issues are important to
consider when developing assessment
questions and safety interventions.
The study, "Reducing My Risk of Intrusion,
An Intention of Old Homebound Women Living
Alone," was published in October, 2008 in
Nursing Research.
The study, "Contemplating What I Would Do If
Someone Got in My House, Intentions of Older
Homebound Women Living Alone," was published
in 2008 in Advances in Nursing Science.
The studies were funded by a grant from the
U.S. National Institutes of Health National
Institute on Aging.
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