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  • Supraregional  (42)
  • 2020-2024  (42)
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  • 1
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: ביטחון סוציאלי
    Angaben zur Quelle: 118 (תשפג) 13-36
    Keywords: Older people Social conditions ; COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- ; COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- Government policy ; Ageism ; Human rights
    Abstract: Background: The Covid-19 pandemic has severely affected the health of theelderly both worldwide and in Israel. In addition to the health hazards thatprey on the elderly during the coronavirus period, the harm to their mentalwell-being and their basic rights cannot be ignored. Ageism and humanrights abuses of elderly people are negative social phenomena which havebeen exacerbated by Covid-19. This article is based on a report (October2020) by the Israel Institute of Equality and Human Rights (The ZulatInstitute) on the human rights issue of the elderly during the coronaviruspandemic whose authors are among its signatories.Aim: To describe the manifestations of ageism in relation to the elderlyduring the first and second wave of the coronavirus pandemic, based on ahuman rights approach.Method: This was a qualitative study, based on consultation with amultidisciplinary group of independent experts in a joint process – amodified Delphi process – of a structured discussion around an openquestionnaire on the treatment of the elderly in Israel during the first andsecond coronavirus waves. During the discussion, the group focused on threemajor human rights relevant to the elderly at this time: the right to respect,the right to participate in decision making and the right to health.Findings: Government policy regarding the elderly in the first months of theoutbreak of the pandemic was characterized by paternalisticoverprotectiveness, ageism and violation of the human rights of elderlypeople to dignity, participation and health. In both geriatric and protected housing institutions, human rights violations of the residents were due tophysical isolation and prolonged social distancing from their relatives. Evenwithin the community, where 94% of the elderly live in Israel, many cases ofsevere bodily and mental health harm were observed resulting from isolationand exclusion. These vulnerabilities are the result, inter alia, of structuralfailures in the public system to support the elderly in Israel, includingdecentralization of governmental responsibility, chronic shortage ofgeriatric-nursing personnel, and privatization of community services for theelderly. In addition, patronizing and ageist attitudes to the elderly werediscussed, as were their needs and what to do about them.Conclusions and recommendations: Policies that will lead to the eradicationof ageism and the prohibition of age discrimination through legislationshould be promoted, and the rights of the elderly to dignity, participation andhealth should be maintained. In addition, the social standing of the elderlyshould be strengthened, as should responses to the needs of the elderly in thecommunity and geriatric institutions. Information suited to digitalcapabilities and language and cultural groups should be made accessible toencourage open and respectful dialogue with the elderly and their familiesabout their wishes regarding the medical care they receive and where it willbe provided. In this way health and social services for the old in thecommunity can be strengthened.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 2
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: ביטחון סוציאלי
    Angaben zur Quelle: 118 (תשפג) 91-122
    Keywords: Older people in mass media ; Older people Press coverage ; COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- ; Mass media and public opinion ; Ageism
    Abstract: This study researched the representation of elderly population in the massmedia during the First year of the Covid-19 pandemic. The aims of the studywere: (1) to reflect the discourse on the elderly in the media and to crack thesense of dissonance between caring for the elderly and their exclusion, anddefining it as dangerous only to the elderly, to keep the sense of threat awayfrom us; (2) to bring up to academic and public discussion and to increasepublic awareness of the ways in which older people are portrayed in the massmedia and the importance of eradication of ageism. The study was based on an analysis of the topics of the articles, headlines andphotos selected by the editors of the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper for itemsrelated to adults in Israel during the Covid-19 pandemic. From the day thepandemic broke out until the end of January 2021. The categories aroundwhich the texts were analyzed were the “voice”: we examined whether andwhen the elderly’s voice was heard, and when it wasn’t or others spoke ontheir behalf; the “image”: which image is chosen next to the title, produces anarrative that shapes attitudes and opinion of elderly life; and the “message”:we sought to analyze, throughout these articles, how the elderly werereflected in the editors’ choice.The study shows a setback in the delicate achievements made in the last threedecades in the context of social and medical perceptions towards the olderpopulation. This setback during the research period was also expressed incriticism of the institutional care policy, upon its proposal of herdvaccination, also at a price that the elderly population in Israel will surelypay.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 3
    Article
    Article
    In:  ביטחון סוציאלי 118 (תשפג) 167-181
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: ביטחון סוציאלי
    Angaben zur Quelle: 118 (תשפג) 167-181
    Keywords: Ageism ; Older people Social conditions 21st century ; COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- Influence
    Abstract: The socio-anthropological study of old age has been captured by the conceptof ageism that accords values of discrimination and inequity to the attitudetowards and the treatment of the elderly. This reflects cultural sentiments ofmodern liberal values of the desire for the equality of human rights alongsidethe recognition of shame and guilt as guiding principles in the constructionof the social status of the old in a youth oriented milieu. The underlyingnarrative generating this stance is the overview of the life cycle as acontinuous developmental process that stretches from cradle to grave in acumulative manner of yielding life overview and temporal build-up ofmemory and identity. The fight against ageism is thus an attempt to avoiddisjuncture and interruption in the integral conception of ageing, hencedenying the boundaries that divide life stages from one another.This endeavor is underpinned by the assumption that cultural categories arebound to be mixed and hybridized as part of the spirit of globalization that isconditioned upon exchange, transformation and conversion. The emergenceof the third age is an example for such hybridized phenomenon consisting ofonce separated age classes. The fourth age, however, defies the notion andpossibility of blended categories as it is an undecipherable, irreversible and existential space beyond understanding, translation and temporality. Thus,the modern bound, mobility geared conceptual language of socialgerontology is ill equipped to tackle the properties of the fourth age, henceconfounding the two into one indivisible epistemological unit of old age. Thethrust of the Covid-19 era catalyzed a critical change in the social standing ofthe old, separating and excluding it from the rest of society while renderingit a race apart. The globalization of the pandemic exiled the whole elderlycategory to an island of the disenfranchised, the condemned and thecontaminated who are subject to compassionate demonization as less thanhumans.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 4
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: ביטחון סוציאלי
    Angaben zur Quelle: 118 (תשפג) 37-61
    Keywords: Ageism ; Older people Interviews ; Older people Institutional care ; COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- Social aspects ; Older people Home care
    Abstract: The article discusses ageist perspectives of the Covid-19 period for the olderpopulation, whether living at home or in out-of-home frameworks, as theyemerged from older people’s reported experiences. Analyzing the interviewsrevealed that ageism connected to the imposed isolation was moreaccentuated in out-of-home frameworks. They were sometimes described as“closed institutions” or even as “prison”. Ignoring the tenants’representatives’ voice further implies further this implication. Nevertheless,despite the strict restrictions imposed in these frameworks it appears thatthe tenants and their representatives complied with this control.Analyzing the interviews indicated that the ageist attitude was also found inrelation to the older people living at their homes. Ageism was revealedthrough the children’s latent control over their older parents’ mobility andtheir decision-making ability. Some of the interviewees suggested that due tothe political and media discourse ageism deepened during Covid-19. Theinterviews also clarified that during this period Arab older people tended tocling harder to faith and religiLatent ageism that is not openly discussed, but which is transferred throughcompassionate righteous attitude, and through ignoring or silencing theelderly, also emerged from the analysis. It is connected, apparently, to thefear and anxiety in referring to the “carriers of death” on the one hand, andto their care on the other. The article’s contribution consists in comparing the older people’sexperiences in the various frameworks, living at home and out of home.Another contribution is the focus on the interviewees’ descriptions of theirown experiences during Covid-19, perceiving them as the basis of theresearch.The research used the qualitative-narrative method. It was conducted duringthe months of August-October 2020 and March-May 2021. 30 interviewswere carried out with both Jewish and Arab elderly people (all of them over75), living at home or in out-of-home frameworks, as well as 7 officials withinthese frameworks.ous rituals.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 5
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: ביטחון סוציאלי
    Angaben zur Quelle: 118 (תשפג) 123-147
    Keywords: Older people in mass media ; Older people Press coverage ; COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- Social aspects ; Mass media and public opinion ; Ageism
    Abstract: This study seeks to expand the discourse on the construction of old age as asocial phenomenon in times of health crises. The study focuses on thechanges that took place in media representations of old age between the firstwave of the Covid-19 in Israel and the following two, considering the declinein morbidity and mortality among the elderly on the one hand, and thecontinuation of social distancing policy on the other hand.Theoretically, the study deals with the nature of the representation of elderlyfrom two perspectives: gerontology and communication studies. Methodologically, the corpus included media texts of three types: 267 newsitems, 25 opinion columns published in the daily printed and online pressalongside 13 sketches from two satire programs that used various rhetoricaltools to deal with the situation. The texts were published during the firstthree Corona waves. Content analysis was done using a model of ‘circles ofbelonging’ (Remer Biel and First, 2013) through which images of aging wereused in a media discourse: the first circle, ‘group affiliation’, addressed theboundaries of the old-age category and the characteristics of belonging to it;the second, ‘belonging to a family’, concentrated on intergenerationalrelations; the third, ‘belonging to work’, focused on the interrelationshipbetween old-age identity and professional identity; the fourth, ‘belonging tothe community’, traced the link between isolating the elderly living at homeand in institutional frameworks and social and community organizations .The model based on these four circles of belonging revealed ageistic andpaternalistic news representations of elder population promoting the policyof closure, and only later challenged these perceptions. In contrast, opinioncolumns and satire programs indicated established institutional ageism as asocial oversight mechanism. That is, the subordination of biological age tosocial and occupational closure. Despite the decline in morbidity in the nexttwo waves, the framing remained similar and the discussion on the elderlydeclined and became limited to reports of outbreaks of infection centers only.The opinion columns debated with the news discourse and suggestedadditional and sometimes alternative images .
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 6
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: ביטחון סוציאלי
    Angaben zur Quelle: 118 (תשפג) 63-89
    Keywords: Labor supply ; COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- Economic aspects ; COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- Social aspects ; Older people Employment ; Age discrimination in employment
    Abstract: The Covid-19 pandemic has intensified the phenomenon of discriminationagainst senior citizens in labor market. These citizens were classified by theWorld Health Organization as “high-risk” for developing seriouscomplications because of the Covid-19 virus, therefore the restrictions ontheir freedom and wellbeing were severe. These also affected their ability to work, although some were forced to continue working due to a pooreconomic situation.Traditionally, senior citizens were perceived as a group with “special needs”only because of their age as criteria for discrimination. The ageismphenomena affected senior citizens even before the outbreak of the Covid-19virus, but during the Covid-19 period the narratives expressed by the mediaand the government regarding the third age group were over-vulnerabilityand burden on the health care system.This complexity is also clearly reflected in our research results conductedamong 18 government ministries regarding the adoption of GovernmentDecision 592 that was made in November 2020, to promote the employmentof senior citizens in the government ministries service. Research findingsindicate a very low rate of senior citizens’ employment expansion ingovernment ministries service since the date of Government Decision 592was made, and in sharp contrast to the government statement of successionpilot of senior citizens absorption in the government ministries service.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 7
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: ביטחון סוציאלי
    Angaben zur Quelle: 118 (תשפג) 183-196
    Keywords: ha-Agudah ha-Yiśreʼelit le-geronṭologyah ; Ageism ; Older people Social conditions ; COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020-
    Abstract: This article describes the way the Israeli Gerontological Association (IGA)addresses the challenges of ageism and the practical measures it took toprotect senior citizens’ rights and provide assistance to seniors during theCorona pandemic. Ageism was evident already at the outbreak of thepandemic. Although this was indeed a preexisting phenomenon in the Israelisociety, it gained in intensity at the time of the pandemic. The way policymakers, the media and even senior level physicians, related to the elderpopulation was characterized by ageistic, paternalistic, and aggressiveattitudes.The overall orientation and approach were based upon chronological agecriteria alone, without any understanding of the vast diversity anddifferences among people, regardless of their chronological age.IGA’s position was that aged people should be treated with equality withoutdistinguishing nor discriminating among individuals based on theirchronological age. Hence, the IGA firmly advocated against this ageistapproach and published a policy paper advancing this view, launched apetition among the general public and joined a coalition of organizations totackle the ageism phenomenon. Early manifestations of ageism during theinitial months of the pandemic included an attempt to order a physicallockdown of aged citizens preventing aged adults from returning to workafter the lockdown period, and steps to prevent aged individuals fromunemployment insurance benefits. Alongside the public campaign againstageism, the IGA helped provide direct assistance to isolated elderly facingdifficult mental health crises and offered current and easily accessibleinformation to both field practitioners and the general public about agingand its manifestations.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 8
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: ביטחון סוציאלי
    Angaben zur Quelle: 118 (תשפג) 5-12
    Keywords: Older people Social conditions ; Ageism ; Stereotypes (Social psychology) ; COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020-
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  • 9
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: ביטחון סוציאלי
    Angaben zur Quelle: 118 (תשפג) 149-166
    Keywords: Psychotherapy for older people ; Ageism ; Therapist and patient ; Transference (Psychology) ; Countertransference (Psychology)
    Abstract: The purpose of this article is to discuss two intertwined issues that occupy gerontologists. The first issue is ageism, and society’s negative attitude towards older adults. This issue creates a shortage of mental health servicesfor the elderly and deters young people from studying and specializing ingerontology. Ageism is also prevalent among many older adults themselves.The second issue is transference and counter-transfer in psychotherapy ofolder adults. The prejudices and ageism of both young and older adults shapethe relationship that is formed between the older patient and the therapist,the latter being often many years younger than the former. It also affects theexpectations of both sides from therapy
    Note: With an English abstract.
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  • 10
    Language: Hebrew
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: ביטחון סוציאלי
    Angaben zur Quelle: 117 (תשפב) 131-158
    Keywords: Labor mobility ; Occupational training ; COVID-19 Pandemic, 2020- Influence ; Employability ; Labor market
    Abstract: One of the main challenges in modern labor markets is to improve themobility and employability of workers among workplaces, jobs and roles.This paper explores the factors that might influence people's beliefs aboutand attitudes towards the mechanisms for improving employability throughtraining. We develop a research model and test it in Israel using surveysthat were distributed at two points in time – before and during an acutecrisis in the labor market – the Covid-19 pandemic, and evaluate theinfluence of the Covid outbreak on the research variables. Although citizensare aware about the need to improve employability, they are less willing topromote or pay for it. Perceptions about personal mobility andemployability, as well as about employment security, play a major role inexplaining citizens' attitudes towards training. Beliefs about theeffectiveness of government training providers can influence on citizens’demand for training. We also reveal a paradox whereby people supporttraining, but also feel that widespread training might reduce theircompetitive advantage in the labor market.Although the unemployment rate increased dramatically following theCovid-19 outbreak, the relationships between the research variables arealmost identical at the two points in time. Our findings indicate thatemployment status is related to citizens' perceived employment securityand their attitudes toward training. Previous educational experience,education and training have a role in perceived employment security andindirectly affect support in training. Policy implications follow.
    Note: With an English abstract.
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