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999 _c8717
_d8717
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008 240522s2022 -nz|| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aAFVC
100 _aWarahi, Te Piere
_913018
245 _aCarers of elderly whānau :
_btheir invisible voices
_cTe Piere Warahi
246 _aA thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Population Health The University of Auckland
260 _c2022
300 _aelectronic document (261 pages) ; PDF file
500 _aPhD thesis, University of Auckland
520 _aThe kaupapa of my research is about Māori whānau carers and the related notion of caring. I moved away from the care recipients’ health issues, accessing government and agency services and the negative impact of caring on the carer. Instead, I focus on exploring the deeper layers of my carers’ narratives to allow their invisible voices to reveal new insights about their caregiving experiences to provide their unique perspective to add to the scholarship of care. Aim: My research aimed to address the question: What is the value of care to the carer? To achieve this goal, I introduced the paradigm of Māori cosmology, the relationship to whakapapa and the connection to Māori carers. I explored the theory that the supernatural heavens and creation stories represent the origin of care. Another impact that I consider is the legacy of colonisation and my carers’ realities in the current century. Methodology: Qualitative research is an interpretive tool, making it a perfect fit for conducting kanohi ki te kanohi (face-to-face) interviews and applying the flexible theory of a kaupapa Māori philosophy (for Māori, by Māori, about Māori). Using a ‘double lens’ approach, I merged the positive energies of te ao Māori and te ao Pākehā by developing, in tandem, the dominant paradigms in Māori and Pākehā of te ao mārama (ontology), whakapapa (epistemology) and kaupapa rangahau (methodology). I introduced two parallel systems in my methodological approach. From te ao Māori, I created a kaupapa Māori pūrākau methodology called ātārangi ki te ātarangi (shadow to shadow) Maori indigenous research. The te ao Pākehā model included relativist ontology to capture the multiple realities developed from social interactions together with a constructivist epistemology perspective to understand meaning and answers from the holistic truths of ‘being’. I chose thematic analysis to develop codes and themes to write up my research. Findings: The answer to the research question was inductively inspired by a participant who coined the groundbreaking phrase care means love. It provided the critical foundations for my research. Hidden in the invisible voices of the carers was the disclosure that the practical 24-hour-a-day, seven-days-a-week trials and tribulations of care were not the focus of the care experience. As part of the holistic care phenomenon, it was through love, honour, respect, admiration, mana and humour that they delighted in recounting their stories. When filtered through care means love, their care narratives contained the core kaupapa of tikanga-aroha and tikanga-love. (Author's abstract). Record #8717
650 _aAROHA
_913019
650 _aCAREGIVERS
_999
650 _aFAMILIES
_9238
650 _aHAUORA
_9281
650 _aHEALTH
_9283
650 _aKAUMĀTUA
_95537
650 _aMĀORI
_9357
650 _aOLDER PEOPLE
_9414
650 _aORA
_95716
650 _aRANGAHAU MĀORI
_95532
650 _aTE AO MĀORI
_912662
650 _aTHESES
_9606
650 0 _aTIKANGA TUKU IHO
_95542
650 _aTUHINGA WHAKAPAE
_95598
650 _aWELLBEING
_96275
650 _aWHĀNAU
_9642
651 4 _aNEW ZEALAND
_92588
856 _uhttps://hdl.handle.net/2292/67491
856 _uhttps://waateanews.com/2024/05/09/te-piere-warahi-73-with-a-phd/
_zRead Waatea News, 9 May 2024
942 _2ddc
_cTHESIS
_hnews128