Making connections through online asthma monitoring

被引:17
作者
Langstrup, Henriette [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Copenhagen, Inst Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Serv Res, Oster Farimagsgade 5,PO 2099, DK-1014 Copenhagen K, Denmark
关键词
Agency; Ethnography; Online asthma monitoring; Primary care;
D O I
10.1177/1742395308092480
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Objectives: This was an observational study of an online asthma monitoring system in Danish primary care practices aimed at exploring the reasons why information and communication technologies (ICTs) intended to connect chronic patients with their care provider fail to become a durable part of treatment practices. Methods: An ethnographic case study was performed, including semi-structured interviews conducted with eight Danish general practitioners (GPs) and one nurse, and participant observation of the system in use. Results: The technology never became a durable part of any of the studied practices. Rather, it was used in different ways (as a patient tool, a nurse intervention tool, or a tool associated with doing clinical research), providing different actors with different kinds of agency. Discussion: Rather than challenging the clinical autonomy of the GPs or granting the patient with autonomy, the technology affords - through these different enactments - various constellations of agency for the GPs and other actors involved in asthma treatment. Problems met in relation to implementation of ICT for chronic disease management are better understood as instances of negotiating which connections are valuable in clinical work. Specific, ethnographic accounts of the local co-construction of agency and technology can provide more relevant insights into the changes entailed by the introduction of ICT for chronic disease management.
引用
收藏
页码:118 / 126
页数:9
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]  
Abbott A., 1988, SYSTEM PROFESSIONS, DOI DOI 10.7208/CHICAGO/9780226189666.001.0001
[2]  
Adams William G, 2003, AMIA Annu Symp Proc, P1
[3]   Clinical autonomy, individual and collective: the problem of changing doctors' behaviour [J].
Armstrong, D .
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2002, 55 (10) :1771-1777
[4]  
Bangert D., 2004, International Journal of Healthcare Technology and Management, V6, P1, DOI 10.1504/IJHTM.2004.004821
[5]   Accumulating and Coordinating: Occasions for Information Technologies in Medical Work [J].
Berg M. .
Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW), 1999, 8 (4) :373-401
[6]   Patient care information systems and health care work: a sociotechnical approach [J].
Berg, M .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INFORMATICS, 1999, 55 (02) :87-101
[7]  
Berg M., 1998, DIFFERENCES MED UNRA
[8]  
Bowker G, 1999, SORTING THINGS OUT C
[9]   Experience-based guidelines for the implementation of telemedicine services [J].
Brebner, JA ;
Brebner, EM ;
Ruddick-Bracken, H .
JOURNAL OF TELEMEDICINE AND TELECARE, 2005, 11 :3-5
[10]   Harnessing the potential of the Internet to promote chronic illness self-management: diabetes as an example of how well we are doing [J].
Bull, Sheana S. ;
Gaglio, Bridget ;
Mckay, H. Garth ;
Glasgow, Russell E. .
CHRONIC ILLNESS, 2005, 1 (02) :143-155