| Literature DB >> 21040575 |
Kathrin M Cresswell1, Allison Worth, Aziz Sheikh.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Actor-Network Theory (ANT) is an increasingly influential, but still deeply contested, approach to understand humans and their interactions with inanimate objects. We argue that health services research, and in particular evaluations of complex IT systems in health service organisations, may benefit from being informed by Actor-Network Theory perspectives. DISCUSSION: Despite some limitations, an Actor-Network Theory-based approach is conceptually useful in helping to appreciate the complexity of reality (including the complexity of organisations) and the active role of technology in this context. This can prove helpful in understanding how social effects are generated as a result of associations between different actors in a network. Of central importance in this respect is that Actor-Network Theory provides a lens through which to view the role of technology in shaping social processes. Attention to this shaping role can contribute to a more holistic appreciation of the complexity of technology introduction in healthcare settings. It can also prove practically useful in providing a theoretically informed approach to sampling (by drawing on informants that are related to the technology in question) and analysis (by providing a conceptual tool and vocabulary that can form the basis for interpretations). We draw on existing empirical work in this area and our ongoing work investigating the integration of electronic health record systems introduced as part of England's National Programme for Information Technology to illustrate salient points.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21040575 PMCID: PMC2988706 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-10-67
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Summary of an ongoing investigation of the introduction of electronic health record (EHR) software in specialist care settings as part of the England's National Programme for Information Technology (NPfIT)
An extract from Berg describing the active role of the medical record in mediating relationships
| Extract from Berg 1996 |
Figure 1A simplified illustration of a potential network in relation to the introduction of an electronic health record system
Figure 2A simplified illustration of a network incorporating micro and macro contexts using the introduction of an electronic health record system as an example
Potentially valuable contributions of the ANT approach in a study exploring the introduction of electronic health record software
| Key notion | Valuable contributions of this notion | Implications for our study | How the study would look if it was not informed by ANT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Translations | Detailed insight into the complexity of different forces at play when artefacts are introduced in a new context - this can also help to inform sampling considerations | Insight into how the software (which was designed by computer scientists) is integrated into the healthcare environment | Might be tempted to neglect the design context and examine the adoption context in isolation |
| Active role of objects | How objects can actively transform established practices by influencing the way human actors are associated | The software is viewed as actively transforming the way care is delivered rather than being a relatively passive piece of equipment | Software may be viewed as passive, which may lead to underestimating its influence |
| Analytical method and theory development | As a conceptual tool to guide the research process, frame the research questions, collect and interpret data and theorise about potential explanations | Focus on a certain technology as a case and sampling different human parties associated with it, notion of networks can help to conceptualise connections and active role of objects can help to theorise about potential outcomes | Sampling may neglect potentially important actors, may result in a limited and a-theoretical approach |
| Generalised symmetry | Can help investigators to resist imposing a priori differences between actors | Helps to recognise that objects can create unpredictable outputs and have agency | Prior assumptions of dualism between humans and objects may distort the analysis |
| Enrolment | Can help to explore how different parties/actors are enrolled into a network and how relationships are formed over time | Helps to map out interests of different parties and how the most powerful (e.g. managers) try to enrol the users in adopting the software | May not be able to capture the different effects and stages of change in detail |
| Flux and changing nature of reality | A tool for exploring how complex relationships between actors and effects come about through movements in the network (e.g. power relationships, social effects) | Helps to conceptualise how change is a process and context dependent | A rigid view of reality may be too simplistic and mask the complexity of change |
Additional factors to consider when using a modified ANT approach
| Methodological issue | How this may be addressed | Implications for our study |
|---|---|---|
| ANT does not a priori divide the world into micro and macro contexts or attribute agency to either individuals or social structures | Broader contextual factors should be taken into account and may be viewed as other parts of the network | Political, cultural and economic environments are important to consider when examining the introduction of the software |
| The number of actors in the network is potentially infinite | Researchers need to make rigorous and pragmatic decisions of where (and from whom) to start and where to stop data collection. The primary focus should be on answering the research question. | Although the focus may be on exploring changes to work processes, views from other relevant stakeholders such as implementation team members, developers and governmental stakeholders may also be sought |
| Different actors can play multiple roles in multiple networks at multiple time points | May be useful to view networks as consisting of several sub-networks and as changing over time | Can examine how different networks align or fail to align (e.g. use of systems across different wards), how they are positioned in relation to larger networks (e.g. the hospital, the historical, cultural, political environment) and how networks change over time (e.g. comparing early and later implementation stages) |
| ANT is too descriptive and fails to come up with any definitive explanations or approaches of how exactly actors should be viewed and analysed | Important not to lose sight of the wider study aims as purist ANT can be prone to getting lost in detail | The focus of the study is on examining the changes in work processes as a result of the introduction of the software and all other activity should centre around this primary research question |
| A truly detached observer does not exist as he/she always comes from a particular position in time and space and plays an active role in eliciting and constructing accounts | Researchers need to be pragmatic and acknowledge their involvement through reflexive accounts | It is important to keep a field journal and reflexive notes throughout data collection and analysis |
| Human accounts and often those of the most powerful are privileged offering little insight into the material world | Need to recognise individual differences between humans and acknowledge that artefacts have attributes and a history | Take into account differences arising from different actors by being explicit about their positioning and the attributes of the technology arising from different historical constellations |