Intersectionality is defined as a methodology of studying the relationships along multiple axes of identity. Offer 2 specific examples from this week’s readings which demonstrate the reason this methodology is important to examining the aging experience of today’s older adults. Will this also be true of future cohorts of older adults?
This methodology is important because it can be applied in nursing to not only acquire an extensive understanding of the various impacts of social and cultural disparities that often affect the marginalized and the vulnerable but also in guiding examination and development of strategies to mitigate health care discrepancies (Kelley 2011).
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Also, Kelley (2011) contends that with this methodology nurses can work to develop systems that diagnose and answer to the need of all the vulnerable, develop an interdisciplinary response team and partner with societal agencies to address behavior among colleagues that fault the victim as well as propagate negative typecasts.
These experiences can also be true in future older adults. However, nurses can play a significant role on how the future health care handles the inequities and differences (Kelley, 2011).
Triple Jeopardy is defined as a multiple-hierarchy threat positing that stratification based on age, race/ethnicity, gender, and or social class interact with one another to potentially put female minorities in old age at risk of poor quality of life. Offer 2 examples from this week’s readings which demonstrate the concept of triple jeopardy. Which of these variable, if any, do you believe are greater threat to the quality of life for older adults? Do you think sexuality orientation should be added to this definition? Culture?
Disenfranchisement is one example that demonstrates the concept of triple jeopardy that puts feminine subgroups in old age at a threat of a deprived quality of life. The disenfranchised usually do not have adequate support systems that enable them to engage in promoting a healthy lifestyle (Bushy, 2009).
Poverty is a serious factor that significantly influences the quality of life of older women. Senior women are members of minority group that experience a high rate of illiteracy, chronic illness, isolation and thus are generally at risk of leading poor quality of life.
Poverty has a greater threat to the quality of life for older adults.
Sexual orientation plays a key role in perpetuating some of the inequalities experienced by women and the elderly and thus should be included in the definition.
References
Bushy, A. (2009). Vulnerability: An overview. In K.Saucier - Lundy, & S. Jaynes (Eds.), Community health nursing: Caring for the public’s health (2 nd Ed.). Boston, MA: Jones & Bartlett.
Kelley, U. (2011). “Theories of Intimate Partner Violence: from blaming the victim to acting injustice: intersectionality as an analytic framework.” Advances in Nursing Sciences 34 (3).