Litcius/Paper detail

Imperfect Solutions to the Neoliberal Problem of Public Aging: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Public Narratives of Long-Term Residential Care

Rowan El-Bialy, Laura Funk, Genevieve Thompson, Malcolm Smith, Philip St John, Kerstin Roger, Jamie Penner, Hai Luo

2021Canadian Journal on Aging / La Revue canadienne du vieillissement13 citationsDOI

Abstract

Public representations of long-term residential care (LTRC) facilities have received limited focus in Canada, although literature from other countries indicates that public perceptions of LTRC tend to be negative, particularly in contexts that prioritize aging and dying in place. Using Manitoba as the study context, we investigate a question of broad relevance to the Canadian perspective; specifically, what are current public perceptions of the role and function of long-term care in the context of a changing health care system? Through critical discourse analysis, we identify four overarching discourses dominating public perceptions of LTRC: the problem of public aging, LTRC as an imperfect solution to the problem, LTRC as ambiguous social spaces, and LTRC as a last resort option. Building on prior theoretical work, we suggest that public perceptions of LTRC are informed by neoliberal discourses that privilege individual responsibility and problematize public care.

Topics & Concepts

Privilege (computing)Context (archaeology)SociologyPublic discoursePerceptionDiscourse analysisCritical discourse analysisImperfectRelevance (law)Public healthNarrativePublic policyPublic relationsPolitical scienceFocus groupPublic sectorNeoliberalism (international relations)Function (biology)Critical theoryNarrative inquirySocial constructionismPublic housingHealth careSubject (documents)Public administrationPublic opinionReflexivityCriticismNew public managementFocus (optics)Social issuesLegitimacyGeriatric Care and Nursing HomesHealthcare innovation and challengesMigration, Aging, and Tourism Studies