The Social Aspects of Ageing in Cyprus
The research project for the Social Problems of Ageing in Cyprus began in January 2007 and will be completed in June 2009.
Funders
- The Cyprus Research Promotion Foundation and
- RUBSI
Contributors
Host Organization: RUBSI
Funding: Cyprus Research Promotion Foundation
Scientific Coordinator: Dr Constantinos Phellas, Associate Professor at School of Humanities, Social Sciences & Law, Intercollege, and Director of RUBSI
Coordinator: Christina Loizou, Sociologist - Researcher, Member of the Executive Board of RUBSI, Representative of Cyprus in the European Network THENAPA II (Thematic Network for Adapted Physical Activity for the Elderly)
End Users:
- Social Welfare Services
- Cyprus Municipalities Association
- Cyprus Family Planning Association
Research’s Aims
- To examine the degree of dependence of dependence of the elderly on their families and/or on state services
- To investigate the extent of those people’s social exclusion
- To research the impact of ageing on their quality of life
- To investigate the interviewees’ social & psychological implications due to ageing
Methodology
Data is being collected through 100 in-depth interviews with elderly people that belong to the following categories:
- People residing at their homes and are self-assisted
- People residing at their homes or with their children and are cared by their children or other relatives
- People residing at their homes and are cared by a foreign or other domestic helper / carer
- People residing at their homes and are cared by the State Care Services for the Elderly
- People residing at their homes and visit the Day Care Centers
- People residing at State Homes for the Elderly
- People residing at Private Homes for the Elderly.
The following themes are explored through the in-depth interviews:
- Demographics
- Type of residence according to the sampling according to the categories stated in the sampling
- Degree of self-care/ dependence
- Degree of biological ageing (illness, health complications etc.)
- Degree of keeping active (professional activity, natural activity, social, financial, spiritual activity etc.)
- Impact of change – due to ageing – on their relationships with other groups of people or with the social public in general (it will be useful at a later stage for the analysis of social networks)
- Problems accruing because of ageing (dependence, immobility, depression, loneliness, seclusion, change in sexual activity, nutritional habits, exercise, etc.)
- Level of satisfaction or lack of satisfaction with regard to the services and care they are provided with
- Level of life satisfaction (from their activities, from their children and grandchildren, their financial conditions, their social environment)


