Literature DB >> 10839580

Retrofitting technology to nursing: the case of electronic fetal monitoring.

M Sandelowski1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To describe how nurses put electronic fetal monitoring to use in the 1960s and 1970s and the dilemmas this caused.
DESIGN: Social history.
RESULTS: Nurses used electronic fetal monitoring to improve the watchful and comfort care of childbearing women, and they saw it as validating nursing. They retrofitted, or worked to reconcile machine monitoring with natural, prepared, and participative childbirth, and with attentive and embodied nursing.
CONCLUSION: Electronic fetal monitoring was another in a long line of technological innovations that fell to nurses to put into use and to make work. The remarkably rapid way electronic fetal monitoring became routine in the United States depended, in large part, on the articulation work of nurses. However, like all such work, what nurses did to make electronic fetal monitoring work for patients, physicians, hospitals, and manufacturers was largely invisible. Retrofitting efforts often entail unrecognized innovation and risks for nursing.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10839580     DOI: 10.1111/j.1552-6909.2000.tb02053.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Obstet Gynecol Neonatal Nurs        ISSN: 0090-0311


  3 in total

1.  A double-edged sword: lactation consultants' perceptions of the impact of breast pumps on the practice of breastfeeding.

Authors:  Kathleen M Buckley
Journal:  J Perinat Educ       Date:  2009

2.  Fetal monitoring: creating a culture of safety with informed choice.

Authors:  Lisa Heelan
Journal:  J Perinat Educ       Date:  2013

3.  The rhetoric of informed choice: perspectives from midwives on intrapartum fetal heart rate monitoring.

Authors:  Carol Hindley; Ann M Thomson
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2005-12       Impact factor: 3.377

  3 in total

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