In our article, “The Ethics in Long-Term Care Model: Everyday Ethics and the Unseen Moral Landscape of Assisted Living,” my colleagues and I pull back the metaphorical covers on value conflicts and uncertainties in assisted living, a popular place for older people who no longer can live independently. We argue that because assisted living communities are simultaneously places where people live, work, and visit, and where daily life, relationships, and care are negotiated in private and public spaces, ethical challenges commonly arise.
Read MoreThe majority of us will require long-term care services and supports at some point during our later years, many in residential care settings. Historically, residential long-term care in North American and many Western European countries has included a range of options such as nursing homes and assisted living facilities. Considerable consumer, policy, and research efforts have focused on how to improve the quality of care that someone receives in such settings, as well as how to move from more medicalized and institutionalized approaches, to more person-centered and empowering approaches and home-like environments.
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