Karen Teshuva
La Trobe University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Karen Teshuva.
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health | 1998
Hal Kendig; Colette Browning; Karen Teshuva
This paper aims to identify aspects of social class that are related to health actions important for older Australians. Data are from the 1994 Health Status of Older People Project baseline survey of 1,000 participants aged 65 and over in Melbourne. Analyses employed logistic regression controlling for age and gender. Physical activity was related to both former occupation and current income; social activity to former occupation; and not smoking to home ownership. Health promotion strategies require a better understanding of the ways in which aspects of social class affect the life course experiences of different birth cohorts. Promotion of physical and social activity in old age needs to take account of the continuing influence of advantages associated with social class.
Australian Social Work | 2009
Lucy Nelms; Victoria Johnson; Karen Teshuva; Peter Foreman; Janet Stanley
Abstract This article reports on Outcomes for older people with complex or chronic care needs, a study undertaken by the Brotherhood of St Laurence and La Trobe University, examining older Victorians’ use of community services following Aged Care Assessment Service (ACAS) recommendations that they remain living at home. The paper reports on interviews with older people and carers undertaken at three-monthly intervals, over 12 months. This paper contributes to understanding the factors that impede or facilitate uptake of community aged care services that are critical to meeting the needs of older people and their carers. The study found that among other factors social isolation, high carer burden, and the older person reporting low mood were important barriers to service uptake. Cost, waiting lists, and service satisfaction were also identified in qualitative data as influencing factors. The study concludes there is a need for better means of identifying and supporting older people and carers at risk to improve community service uptake.
Australasian Journal on Ageing | 2017
Julie M. Ellis; Ros Ben-Moshe; Karen Teshuva
To evaluate the effects of a laughter yoga activities (LY) program for older people living in residential aged care homes (RACHs).
Qualitative Health Research | 2017
Karen Teshuva; Allan Borowski; Yvonne Wells
Lack of awareness among paid carers of the possible late-life consequences of early-life periods of extreme and prolonged traumatization may have negative impacts on the experiences of trauma survivors in receiving care. An interpretive phenomenological approach was used to investigate the lived experience of paid carers in providing care for Jewish Holocaust survivors. In total, 70 carers participated in 10 focus group discussions. Credibility of the findings was ensured by methodological triangulation and peer debriefing. Three major themes emerged: (a) knowing about survivors’ past helps me make sense of who they are, (b) the trauma adds an extra dimension to caregiving, and (c) caring for survivors has an emotional impact. Specific knowledge, attitudes, and skills for building positive care relationships with Holocaust survivors were identified. The findings offer a starting point for advancing knowledge about the care of older survivors from other refugee backgrounds.
Ageing & Society | 2014
Karen Teshuva; Yvonne Wells
ABSTRACT This qualitative study investigated the ageing and aged care experiences in Australia of two cohorts of older survivors of genocide: Jewish Holocaust survivors and older Cambodian genocide survivors. It was carried out in response to an identified need to better train aged care workers who are in contact with these groups. In-depth interviews were conducted with 21 community-dwelling survivors aged 65 and over. Credibility was ensured by methodological triangulation and peer debriefing. The study highlighted the importance of understanding older survivors’ ageing and aged care experiences in the context of their entire lifecourse and in terms of both vulnerability and resilience. It showed that trauma history can heighten older survivors’ sensitivity to many aspects of the social and physical environments in residential, community and home-based aged care settings. The study also uncovered the potential for aged care services to help older survivors cope with the psycho-social and emotional effects of resurfacing post-traumatic stress symptoms. The implications of the study findings for care practice include the importance of recognising older survivors of genocide as a distinct group of clients and the need to distinguish staff training for caring for this client group from general cultural awareness training.
Australian Health Review | 2012
Anna L. Howe; Debra King; Julie M. Ellis; Yvonne Wells; Zhang Wei; Karen Teshuva
Ageing & Society | 2013
Sean Cowlishaw; Sylvia Niele; Karen Teshuva; Colette Browning; Hal Kendig
Archive | 2014
Yvonne Wells; Sunil Bhar; Glynda Kinsella; Catherine Kowalski; Monika Merkes; Allison Patchett; Barbara Salzmann; Karen Teshuva; John van Holsteyn
Australasian Journal on Ageing | 2010
Karen Teshuva
Journal of allied health | 2009
Colette Browning; Jane Sims; Hal Kendig; Karen Teshuva