Carole Hollingsworth
Georgia State University
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Featured researches published by Carole Hollingsworth.
Journal of Applied Gerontology | 2009
Mary M. Ball; Molly M. Perkins; Carole Hollingsworth; Frank J. Whittington; Sharon V. King
This article examines how race and class influence decisions to move to assisted living facilities. Qualitative methods were used to study moving decisions of residents in 10 assisted living facilities varying in size and location, as well as race and socioeconomic status of residents. Data were derived from in-depth interviews with 60 residents, 43 family members and friends, and 12 administrators. Grounded theory analysis identified three types of residents based on their decision-making control: proactive, compliant, and passive/resistant. Only proactive residents (less than a quarter of residents) had primary control. Findings show that control of decision making for elders who are moving to assisted living is influenced by class, though not directly by race. The impact of class primarily related to assisted-living placement options and strategies available to forestall moves. Factors influencing the decision-making process were similar for Black and White elders of comparable socioeconomic status.
Journal of Aging Studies | 2014
Mary M. Ball; Candace L. Kemp; Carole Hollingsworth; Molly M. Perkins
Where people die has important implications for end-of-life (EOL) care. Assisted living (AL) increasingly is becoming a site of EOL care and a place where people die. AL residents are moving in older and sicker and with more complex care needs, yet AL remains largely a non-medical care setting that subscribes to a social rather than medical model of care. The aims of this paper are to add to the limited knowledge of how EOL is perceived, experienced, and managed in AL and to learn how individual, facility, and community factors influence these perceptions and experiences. Using qualitative methods and a grounded theory approach to study eight diverse AL settings, we present a preliminary model for how EOL care transitions are negotiated in AL that depicts the range of multilevel intersecting factors that shape EOL processes and events in AL. Facilities developed what we refer to as an EOL presence, which varied across and within settings depending on multiple influences, including, notably, the dying trajectories and care arrangements of residents at EOL, the prevalence of death and dying in a facility, and the attitudes and responses of individuals and facilities toward EOL processes and events, including how deaths were communicated and formally acknowledged and the impact of death and dying on the residents and staff. Our findings indicate that in the majority of cases, EOL care must be supported by collaborative arrangements of care partners and that hospice care is a critical component.
Journal of Geriatric Physical Therapy | 2003
Leslie F. Taylor; Frank J. Whittington; Carole Hollingsworth; Mary M. Ball; Sharon V. King; Sadhna Diwan; Christine A. Rosenbloom; Vickie Patterson; Armon Neel
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine the effectiveness of 2 consecutive 10‐week exercise interventions for increasing functional ability of residents living in personal care homes (PCHs). Methods: Residents in 2 intervention homes (n = 15) participated in a series of exercise classes followed by a walking program. Residents living in 2 PCHs matched for demographic and environmental variables served as controls (n = 15). Pre‐ and post‐test measures (0 weeks and 21 weeks) included the Modified Barthel Index (MBI), the Tinetti Performance‐Oriented Mobility Assessment (POMA), and the Functional Reach Test (FRT). A General Linear Model was used to analyze group (control vs. intervention) by time (0 vs. 21 weeks) interactions as well as changes over time within the intervention group (0 vs. 10 vs. 21 weeks). Results: In comparing the 2 groups at the beginning and end of the intervention, the POMA Balance Subscale showed significant improvement (p = .04) for the intervention group. Within the intervention group, scores of the MBI and POMA increased after the 10‐week exercise class series, then declined exhibiting a significant quadratic relationship (p = .03). Conclusions: It is likely that without the intervention, the gradual decline noted in the control group would have occurred in the intervention group as well. Given that older adults who live in PCHs often experience declines in their activities of daily living (ADL) and independent activities of daily living (IADL) performance, it is critical that physical activity programs be available to residents to mitigate and/or reverse these declines.
Journal of Applied Gerontology | 2000
Mary M. Ball; Frank J. Whittington; Molly M. Perkins; Vickie Patterson; Carole Hollingsworth; Sharon V. King; Bess L. Combs
Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2004
Mary M. Ball; Molly M. Perkins; Frank J. Whittington; Bettye Rose Connell; Carole Hollingsworth; Sharon V. King; Carrie L. Elrod; Bess L. Combs
Journal of Aging Studies | 2004
Mary M. Ball; Molly M. Perkins; Frank J. Whittington; Carole Hollingsworth; Sharon V. King; Bess L. Combs
Journal of Aging Studies | 2012
Molly M. Perkins; Mary M. Ball; Frank J. Whittington; Carole Hollingsworth
Gerontologist | 2013
Molly M. Perkins; Mary M. Ball; Candace L. Kemp; Carole Hollingsworth
Journal of Community Health Nursing | 2003
Leslie F. Taylor; Frank J. Whittington; Carole Hollingsworth; Mary M. Ball; Sharon V. King; Vickie Patterson; Sadhna Diwan; Chris Rosenbloom; Armon Neel
Journals of Gerontology Series B-psychological Sciences and Social Sciences | 2012
Candace L. Kemp; Mary M. Ball; Carole Hollingsworth; Molly M. Perkins