Abstract

There is an urge to introduce high technology and robotics in care settings. Assisted living (AL) is the fastest growing form of older adults’ long-term care. Resident autonomy has become the watchword for good care. This article sheds light on the potential effects of care robotics on the sense of autonomy of older people in AL. Three aspects of the residents’ sense of autonomy are of particular interest: (a) interaction-based sense of autonomy, (b) coping-based sense of autonomy, and (c) potential-based sense of autonomy. Ethnographical data on resident autonomy in an AL facility and existing literature on care robots are utilized in studying what kind of assurances different types of robots would provide to maintain the sense of autonomy in AL. Robots could strengthen the different types of sense of autonomy in multiple ways. Different types of robots could widen the residents’ space of daily movements, sustain their capacities, and help them maintain and even create future expectations. Robots may strengthen the sense of autonomy of older persons in AL; however, they may simultaneously pose a threat. Multi-professional discussions are needed on whether robots are welcomed in care, and if they are, how, for whom, and in what areas.

Highlights

  • There are two major trends in Western long-term care for older people today

  • Regarding care robotics and older people’s sense of autonomy, we found three previously formed aspects of residents’ sense of autonomy to be of particular interest: (a) the influence of other people, (b) the level of a person’s remaining functional abilities linked to coping strategies, and (c) the potentials to act

  • One distinct advantage of robots is their ability to sustain the capacities of an individual to be an autonomous decider or agent—one who does not need any of the three strategies to maintain her/his sense of autonomy

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Summary

Introduction

There are two major trends in Western long-term care for older people today. The first concerns the substance and quality of care, in which the keywords have become individuality (Brooker 2004; Brownie and Nancarrow 2013) and autonomy (Agich 2003; Christman 2014; Lidz et al 1992). Logistic robots are in professional use in big hospitals and distribution centers; they have the potential to serve individual older persons in the future (Benzidia et al 2018), decreasing the feeling of being dependent on nursing staff Such technological aids can facilitate the interaction-based sense of autonomy. Robots may work as extensions of older persons’ functional abilities, both concrete and potential (e.g., exoskeletons or robot wheelchairs enabling moving around and taking part in one’s favorite hobbies, even in modified forms) Another perspective to the potential-based sense of autonomy is that the use of robots in itself may make residents feel more connected to society. A robot could keep up the dignity of an older person if it helped her to dress up and groom herself in an appropriate way, or if the robot utilized stored knowledge on older person’s previous life and preferences or improved their control over the environment (Sharkey 2014)

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