TY - JOUR
T1 - Aging Alone in a Continuous Traumatic Situation
T2 - External Coping Resources
AU - Hadida-Naus, Shirly
AU - Spector-Mersel, Gabriela
AU - Shiovitz-Ezra, Sharon
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Exposure to a persistent terrorist threat constitutes a continuous traumatic situation (CTS) that can severely impact one’s mental and physical health. For older adults living in CTS, this risk is compounded by the challenges of aging. This vulnerability is significantly heightened for older adults living alone in CTS, who typically experience increased social isolation and loneliness. Past research has explored internal coping resources that help these individuals deal with their stressful circumstances. Nevertheless, external coping resources have been hardly explored, making it difficult to create policies and practices to support older adults living alone in areas affected by terrorism. To address this lacuna, we conducted semi-structured in-depth interviews with 15 older adults living alone in Sderot, an Israeli city that has been under constant terror attacks for over two decades, and analyzed them using thematic analysis. Four external coping resources were identified: family; friendships; communal resources including a sense of belonging to their community and neighbors; and formal resources provided to them by the municipality and the state, comprising instrumental and emotional support. The findings affirm the significance of external coping resources for older adults facing continuous stress and trauma, suggesting ways to strengthen these resources to boost individuals’ resilience.
AB - Exposure to a persistent terrorist threat constitutes a continuous traumatic situation (CTS) that can severely impact one’s mental and physical health. For older adults living in CTS, this risk is compounded by the challenges of aging. This vulnerability is significantly heightened for older adults living alone in CTS, who typically experience increased social isolation and loneliness. Past research has explored internal coping resources that help these individuals deal with their stressful circumstances. Nevertheless, external coping resources have been hardly explored, making it difficult to create policies and practices to support older adults living alone in areas affected by terrorism. To address this lacuna, we conducted semi-structured in-depth interviews with 15 older adults living alone in Sderot, an Israeli city that has been under constant terror attacks for over two decades, and analyzed them using thematic analysis. Four external coping resources were identified: family; friendships; communal resources including a sense of belonging to their community and neighbors; and formal resources provided to them by the municipality and the state, comprising instrumental and emotional support. The findings affirm the significance of external coping resources for older adults facing continuous stress and trauma, suggesting ways to strengthen these resources to boost individuals’ resilience.
KW - Community
KW - continuous traumatic situation
KW - external coping resources
KW - formal and informal resources
KW - living alone
KW - terrorist threat
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85211133404&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/01634372.2024.2435912
DO - 10.1080/01634372.2024.2435912
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C2 - 39620713
AN - SCOPUS:85211133404
SN - 0163-4372
JO - Journal of Gerontological Social Work
JF - Journal of Gerontological Social Work
ER -