Feelings of distance and proximity: exploring the emotional geographies of men caregiving for family members with multiple chronic conditions |
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Authors: | Melissa Giesbrecht Allison Williams Wendy Duggleby Bharthi Sethi Jenny Ploeg Maureen Markle-Reid |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Geography &2. Earth Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada;3. Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada;4. School of Social Work, Kings College Western University, London, Canada;5. School of Nursing, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada |
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Abstract: | Care exchanges are imbued with emotion, yet few geography of caregiving researchers have explored how emotions shape such experiences. Furthermore, the emotions of caregiver men have been largely overlooked. As such, this secondary analysis aims to geographically explore the emotion discourse of a diverse group of men caregiving for family members with multiple chronic conditions. Drawing on semi-structured interviews with nineteen men caregivers in Canada, our thematic findings reveal that the men’s discourse portrayed emotions experienced relationally at three levels: Between the caregivers and their own selves, others and the wider community. It was also found that the men commonly expressed their emotional experiences using geographic notions of distance (e.g. feeling far, isolated) and proximity (e.g. feeling close, connected) and that these emotions were further complicated by the participants’ diversity or situated ‘place-in-the-world’. Overall, our findings demonstrate the importance of emotional geographies in caregiver men’s lived realities and how they move between distance and proximity in order to manage their emotions as caregivers. By considering caregiver diversity and the role emotions play in shaping caregiver experiences, programs, services and best practice can become better informed on ways to enhance the provision of more context sensitive and equitable caregiver support. |
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Keywords: | Emotions family caregiving relationships men Canada |
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