Litcius/Paper detail

Ageism, Racism, Sexism, and Work With Older Healthcare Clients: Why an Intersectional Approach Is Needed in Practice, Policy, Education, and Research

Michelle D. Hand, Emily S. Ihara

2023The International Journal of Aging and Human Development15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Women are subject to health disparities across the life course, owing to multiple factors, including sexism, ageism, and other forms of structural discrimination and mistreatment which have been linked with greater risks for sexual violence and related trauma as well as resulting problems with physical and mental health as well as overall wellbeing. Thus, a more intersectional approach to healthcare and social service delivery for older women is expressly needed, particularly since the COVID-19 pandemic, to address UN Global goals of advancing health and wellness, gender equality, less disparities altogether, and with this, greater justice. As such, in this article, timely needs for practice, policy, research, and education will be explored, to address intersectional prejudice and discrimination, chiefly among older women who are members of nondominant populations, to improve healthcare and social services and social justice, principally in later life.

Topics & Concepts

Prejudice (legal term)RacismMental healthHealth carePsychologyCriminologySocial workHealth equityEconomic JusticePandemicGerontologySociologyMedicineNursingPolitical scienceGender studiesCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Social psychologyPublic healthPsychiatryDiseaseInfectious disease (medical specialty)LawPathologySex and Gender in HealthcareHealth disparities and outcomesAging and Gerontology Research
Ageism, Racism, Sexism, and Work With Older Healthcare Clients: Why an Intersectional Approach Is Needed in Practice, Policy, Education, and Research | Litcius