'Doing Death' the Mediterranean way : end-of-life in a segregated nursing home
Version
Published
Date Issued
2019
Author(s)
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
This paper presents ethnographic data on a migrant-specific nursing home ward in Switzerland. It shows that the structurally pre-defined segregation of residents sharing a common characteristic affects care practices along three dimensions: performances of sameness/otherness, informalisation of relationships and language/understanding. Yet, ‘death work’ showed little difference to non-segregated wards. However, relatives’ practices in dying trajectories were less congruent with nursing home ‘doing death’, and collisions may evolve. The need for negotiations associated with running a segregated ward seems to elicit enhanced institutional reflexivity with potential to increase the ability of institutions to provide diversity-sensitive services to all residents.
KEYWORDS: Nursing home, end-of-life care, doing death, migration, diversity, ethnography
KEYWORDS: Nursing home, end-of-life care, doing death, migration, diversity, ethnography
Publisher DOI
Journal
Mortality
ISSN
1357-6275
Organization
Volume
24
Issue
3
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Submitter
Golz, Christoph
Citation apa
Soom Ammann, E., Rauber, G., & Salis Gross, C. (2019). “Doing Death” the Mediterranean way : end-of-life in a segregated nursing home. In Mortality (Vol. 24, Issue 3). Taylor & Francis. https://doi.org/10.24451/arbor.10206
Note
Date: 2019
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