Encountering the intimacy versus isolation crisis life
Nursing home from resdident point of view assignment
Ana seen was actually correct to think that being short-handed doesn’t mean they don’t get the type of nursing care they need. And while she might have this thinking, she seemed to have more concern over the situation of the people who take care of her (nurses), than her own circumstances as a nursing home resident who gets below quality nursing care. “ If you could run the nursing home for a week, what would you do different? ” Developmental Stage: Psychosocial Theory of Development: Integrity versus Despair The resident said that she wouldn’t want to run this place due to too such responsibility.
But later on, she suggested that she would hire more nurses, never get any “ grumpy” nurses, and pay nurses more than what they were getting. “ Have nurses ever been gruff with you? What do you do when a nurse gets gruff with you? ” I asked this question to verify the problems of the resident regarding living and working with nurses and how she copes up. The resident answered that it can’t be helped to get “ grumpy” nurses sometimes. Developmental Stage: Post-conventional Morality Stage 3 She seemed to accept the reality of some people being grumpy with her.
She also said she didn’t want to die in the nursing home, but she thought she had no choice, and that her death in the nursing home was an inevitable thing, Just like how other residents died in the nursing home. Developmental Stage: Psychosocial Theory of Development: Integrity versus Despair In her answer, it is confirmed that the resident was in the midst of integrity and despair of her psychosocial crisis, in the sense that she kept integrity when she said she was happy as she could be; but she hinted sadness when she talked about her dead husband and relating it to her current life.
In the end, she has learned to accept the reality of her life. Diversity: Being in “ Intimacy vs.. Isolation” crisis, I felt that I would not want to live alone in my elderly years, away from my family, in contrast to my friend in the nursing home.