Living in XTC: An Autoethnography and Institutional Ethnography of My Experience Residing in a Government Funded Long-Term Care Institution
Abstract
This thesis is an autoethnography and institutional ethnography of my experience
as a disabled young adult within a publicly funded long-term health care facility. By way of
explication and analysis of a number of factors, including my personal experience, health
region and long-term health care facility formal policies, practices, reviews, reports and
nurse charting, I investigate and illuminate a relatively obscure unjust societal
phenomenon: disabled young adults living in an old folks’ home. My research examines
how the ruling power relations in a government funded health region and a long-term
health care facility, organized through a bureaucracy, form a total institution for young
adult residents. Bringing together autoethnography and institutional ethnography creates
a unique social scientific methodological tandem that suits my set of circumstances and
goal of changing the research context for the better. Both methods were developed to
investigate societal problems as socially just acts.