Health programmes that offer »help to self-help« are meant to empower
ageing adults to remain independent and self-sufficient at home for as
long as possible. But what happens when the private home becomes a
political realm in which state intervention and individual agency happen
simultaneously? Based on 15 months of ethnographic fieldwork in a Danish
municipality, Amy Clotworthy describes how both health professionals and
elderly citizens negotiate the political discourses about health and
ageing that frame their relational encounter. By elucidating some of the
conflicts, paradoxes, and negotiations that occur, she provides
important insights into the contemporary organisation of eldercare.