Abstract

Background and aimPublic health measures used to mitigate the COVID-19 epidemic may have unintended, detrimental consequences particularly on older adults, whose voices and perspectives are often silent or silenced. The aim of this study was to explore the lived experiences of individuals aged 64 or older during the first COVID-19 lockdown.MethodsWe conducted a qualitative study in a convenience sample of 19 older adults (aged 64+) living at home in the Italian-speaking region of Switzerland during the first COVID-19 lockdown, between April and May 2020. Participants varied in terms of gender, education, age, nationality, and socio-economic status. We conducted semi-structured phone interviews to elicit emotions, expectations and hopes in relation to the present situation, and the post-pandemic world. We inquired about opinions on the enforced public health measures, including those specifically targeting older adults, and on the societal portrayal of older adults.FindingsWe found that the epidemic and the public health response to it had both generated a variety of resentments and a high degree of ambivalence at the individual, micro-, meso- and macro-social levels. We also found that labelling older adults as an at-risk sub-population inevitably contributed to public and self-stigmatization.DiscussionWe conducted an in-depth qualitative investigation of lived experiences of older adults during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in one of the most gravely hit region in Europe. Our findings on the complexity of unintended, detrimental consequences of outbreak responses on older adults have relevant implications for local adaptions of public health measures, and suggest that public health authorities should engage vulnerable sub-populations and promote bi-directional communication to inform and support communities.

Highlights

  • Older adults have been disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 outbreak in several ways, leading some scholars to define it a “geriatric health emergency” [1,2,3,4]

  • Our aim was to investigate the lived experiences of older adults in relation to the COVID-19 epidemic and the public health measures and policies, the lockdown implemented in Spring 2020

  • By recognizing all older adults as an at-risk category, the current pandemic has the potential to change the social representation of old age and reinforce ageism-based beliefs and attitudes among the population, including the elderly themselves

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Summary

Introduction

Older adults (i.e., individuals aged 65 or older) have been disproportionately affected by the COVID-19 outbreak in several ways, leading some scholars to define it a “geriatric health emergency” [1,2,3,4]. The public health measures enforced to mitigate the impact of the epidemic, in particular community restrictions, have inevitably contributed to social isolation and loneliness in older adults, with marked consequences on mental and physical health [9,10,11,12]. Stay-at-home restrictions and strict physical distancing have targeted older adults earlier, for longer, or more aggressively compared to younger age groups, contributing to increased anxiety and fear of illness and death [13], disruption of daily routines [14], denied or hampered access to daily care and treatment for conditions that are unrelated to COVID-19, and socioeconomic disruptions [15]. Public health measures used to mitigate the COVID-19 epidemic may have unintended, detrimental consequences on older adults, whose voices and perspectives are often silent or silenced. The aim of this study was to explore the lived experiences of individuals aged 64 or older during the first COVID-19 lockdown

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