Literature DB >> 18085441

Power, technology and social studies of health care: an infrastructural inversion.

Casper Bruun Jensen1.   

Abstract

Power, dominance, and hierarchy are prevalent analytical terms in social studies of health care. Power is often seen as residing in medical structures, institutions, discourses, or ideologies. While studies of medical power often draw on Michel Foucault, this understanding is quite different from his proposal to study in detail the "strategies, the networks, the mechanisms, all those techniques by which a decision is accepted" [Foucault, M. (1988). In Politics, philosophy, culture: Interviews and other writings 1977-84 (pp. 96-109). New York: Routledge]. This suggestion turns power into a topic worth investigating in its own right rather than a basic analytical resource. It also suggests that technologies form an integral part of the networks and mechanisms, which produce and redistribute power in medical practice. The paper first engages critically with a number of recent discussions of technology and power in health care analysis. It then formulates an alternative conception of this relationship by drawing on Foucault and historian of science and technology Geoffrey C. Bowker's notions of infrastructural inversion and information mythology. Illustration is provided through a case study of a wireless nursing call system in a Canadian hospital.

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 18085441     DOI: 10.1007/s10728-007-0076-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Care Anal        ISSN: 1065-3058


  10 in total

1.  When protocols fail: technical evaluation, biomedical knowledge, and the social production of 'facts' about a telemedicine clinic.

Authors:  C May; N T Ellis
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2001-10       Impact factor: 4.634

2.  The problem of evidence-based medicine: directions for social science.

Authors:  Eric Mykhalovskiy; Lorna Weir
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 4.634

3.  Structuring health needs assessments: the medicalisation of health visiting.

Authors:  Sarah Cowley; Jan Mitcheson; Anna M Houston
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2004-07

4.  Transforming general practice: the redistribution of medical work in primary care.

Authors:  Huw Charles-Jones; Joanna Latimer; Carl May
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2003-01

5.  The practice of medical technology.

Authors:  Stefan Timmermans; Marc Berg
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2003

6.  Technology and medical practice.

Authors:  Christian Heath; Paul Luff; Marcus Sanchez Svensson
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2003

7.  The ambivalent chaplain: negotiating structural and ideological difference on the margins of modern-day hospital medicine.

Authors:  Frances Norwood
Journal:  Med Anthropol       Date:  2006 Jan-Mar

8.  Political power beyond the State: problematics of government. 1992.

Authors:  Nikolas Rose; Peter Miller
Journal:  Br J Sociol       Date:  2010-01

Review 9.  Scientism and economism in the regulation of health care.

Authors:  D M Frankford
Journal:  J Health Polit Policy Law       Date:  1994       Impact factor: 2.265

10.  Claims and disclaimers: whose expertise counts?

Authors:  Linda F Hogle
Journal:  Med Anthropol       Date:  2002 Jul-Dec
  10 in total
  2 in total

1.  Humanitarian inversions: COVID-19 as crisis.

Authors:  Clare Herrick; Ann Kelly; Jeanne Soulard
Journal:  Trans Inst Br Geogr       Date:  2022-04-28

2.  From theory to 'measurement' in complex interventions: methodological lessons from the development of an e-health normalisation instrument.

Authors:  Tracy L Finch; Frances S Mair; Catherine O'Donnell; Elizabeth Murray; Carl R May
Journal:  BMC Med Res Methodol       Date:  2012-05-17       Impact factor: 4.615

  2 in total

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