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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 10, 2026

Experimental Paradigm for Measuring the Effects of Self-distancing in Young Children
07:01

Experimental Paradigm for Measuring the Effects of Self-distancing in Young Children

Published on: March 1, 2019

Doing it my way.

Lisa E Skemp1, Meridean L Maas2, Michelle Umbarger-Mackey3

  • 1School of Nursing, Our Lady of the Lake College, Baton Rouge, Louisiana. lisa.skemp@ololcollege.edu.

The Gerontologist
|June 1, 2013
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Rural elders chose motel living for independence, safety, and community connections. This housing option supports healthy aging by leveraging natural social networks.

Keywords:
Case studyCommunityMotelSROSelf-care-related choices

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Area of Science:

  • Gerontology
  • Rural Health
  • Sociology of Aging

Background:

  • Historically, hotels and single-room occupancy residences offered housing and support to elders.
  • This study examines a unique housing choice among rural elders.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To describe how and why middle-income and affluent rural elders chose motel living.
  • To understand this housing option as a means of maintaining community independence.

Main Methods:

  • Employed an ethnographic community study design.
  • Utilized formal and informal interviews, participant observation, and inductive comparative case study analysis.
  • Focused on a case study of 7 rural elders residing in a motel.

Main Results:

  • Elders cited reasons such as "saving my energy for living," "safety," "connections and privacy," and "the freedom to come and go."
  • Motel living facilitated elders' ability to remain independent within their community.

Conclusions:

  • Motel living emerged as a viable housing option for independent rural elders.
  • Findings highlight the importance of naturally occurring social networks for community capacity and healthy aging in rural settings.
  • Informs elder care policy by emphasizing community-based support systems.