Tragedy and value of life of older persons in long-term care homes during COVID-19: a critical discourse analysis

IF 2.3 3区 社会学 Q2 GERONTOLOGY Ageing & Society Pub Date : 2024-04-26 DOI:10.1017/s0144686x24000217
Sabrina Lessard, Oluwagbemiga Oyinlola, Tamara Sussman
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Abstract

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the media provided daily coverage of this unprecedented crisis in the history of the 21st century. Some topics, such as how the virus affected older adults, were widely covered. The way in which COVID-19 was documented evoked a ‘tragedy’ narrative through consistent reporting about the suffering it was causing and the deleterious consequences it had on specific populations, including residents of long-term care homes (LTC). This article explores how reports on COVID-19 in LTC homes in a national newspaper (The Globe and Mail) fuelled a tragedy discourse that modulated the value of life of older adults living in those environments. We used critical discourse analysis and analysed 74 articles focusing on older persons residing in LTC homes in two Canadian provinces (Quebec and Ontario) during COVID-19. This article offers a brief overview of the notion of tragedy and how the discourse of tragedy is intertwined with humanitarian crises, life and death, and the value of life. Our findings revealed the construction of three types of tragedies that shape our societal values around life and death in LTC: the tragedy of the threat to life, the tragedy of the unfortunate (old, vulnerable and lacking in agency) and, finally, the tragedy of historical neglect and abandonment. Our findings suggest that the nature of reporting on life and death in LTC homes during the COVID-19 pandemic provoked a sense of fear and pity for a passive other. Re-thinking what gets reported in the media, including whose voice is represented/missing and how tragedy narratives are balanced with contesting stories, could elicit more sentiments of solidarity and action rather than reinforce pity, distancing and immobilisation.

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COVID-19 期间长期护理院老年人的悲剧和生命价值:批判性话语分析
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,媒体每天都在报道这场 21 世纪史无前例的危机。一些话题,如病毒如何影响老年人,被广泛报道。通过持续报道 COVID-19 带来的痛苦及其对特定人群(包括长期护理院(LTC)的居民)造成的有害后果,COVID-19 的报道方式唤起了一种 "悲剧 "叙事。本文探讨了一家全国性报纸(《环球邮报》)对长期护理院中 COVID-19 的报道如何助长了悲剧论调,从而改变了生活在这些环境中的老年人的生命价值。我们采用批判性话语分析方法,分析了 74 篇文章,这些文章关注的是在 COVID-19 期间居住在加拿大两个省份(魁北克省和安大略省)的长者护理院中的老年人。本文简要概述了悲剧的概念,以及悲剧话语如何与人道主义危机、生死和生命价值交织在一起。我们的研究结果表明,有三种类型的悲剧塑造了我们对长期治疗中生与死的社会价值观:生命受到威胁的悲剧、不幸者(年老、易受伤害和缺乏行为能力)的悲剧以及历史忽视和遗弃的悲剧。我们的研究结果表明,在 COVID-19 大流行期间,有关长者照护中心的生死报道的性质激起了人们对被动他者的恐惧和怜悯。重新思考媒体报道的内容,包括谁的声音被代表/缺失,以及悲剧叙事如何与有争议的故事保持平衡,可以激发更多的团结和行动情绪,而不是强化怜悯、疏远和无动于衷。
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来源期刊
Ageing & Society
Ageing & Society GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
8.00%
发文量
144
期刊介绍: Ageing & Society is an interdisciplinary and international journal devoted to the understanding of human ageing and the circumstances of older people in their social and cultural contexts. It draws contributions and has readers from many disciplines including gerontology, sociology, demography, psychology, economics, medicine, social policy and the humanities. Ageing & Society promotes high-quality original research which is relevant to an international audience to encourage the exchange of ideas across the broad audience of multidisciplinary academics and practitioners working in the field of ageing.
期刊最新文献
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