| Literature DB >> 28915809 |
Randi Stokke1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Technological innovations are strongly promoted to meet the demands posed by increased pressure on home care services and to assist ageing in place in western societies. Although heavily advocated as plug and play solutions, technologies have proven difficult and unpredictable when integrated into home care services. We need greater insight into what happens when technologies are integrated into caring practices. All technologies come with expectations as to their function. This study explores how actors who are involved with the social alarm, which is an established technology innovation, relate to, perceive and articulate these expectations of the technology in everyday living.Entities:
Keywords: Domestication; Home care; Innovation; Older people; Personal Emergency Response System (PERS); Script; Social alarm; Telecare; Welfare technology
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28915809 PMCID: PMC5602870 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2587-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
The criteria for strategic recruitment
| Participants | Recruiting criteria. Aiming for maximum diversity |
|---|---|
| End users | Had possessed the social alarm for more than one year. Different experiences with activating the alarm. Both sexes, a variety of age, living conditions and dependency. |
| Next of kin | Next of kin with different relationship to the end user. Difference in interactions, and how far they lived from the end user. |
| Home Care workers. | Experience with the social alarm. Different background and work responsibility related to the social alarm. |
Fig. 1The scripting process of the social alarm that emerged in this study
How the social alarm in integrated into the home care services in the two municipalities
| Municipality 1 | Municipality 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Who answers the activated alarm | Home care nurse on duty | Private alarm call centre, with dedicated personal |
| Respondents’ profession | Health care worker, nurse | Not health care workers |
| Respondent knows the alarm activator | Often, since the alarm activator was a frequent user of home care service | Usually not. The alarm centre services many municipalities |
| Receiving the alarm | Home care nurse talked to the alarm activator if possible | The call centre personnel talked to the alarm activator if possible |
| Effectuating the response | The home care nurse either visited the person in need or activated other proper response | Most frequently, the call centre called the home care nurse and they visited the person in need or activated other proper response |
| Benefits of the organisation | Health care professional answered all alarm calls. | Home care workers are only disturbed when necessary |
| Drawbacks of the organisation | Home care nurses are disturbed unnecessarily during their work by activated alarms that could have been checked out by other personnel (false alarms, requests etc.) | The personnel manning the call centre are not health care workers. |
Fig. 2Presents an overview of the different dimensions of scripts that must be accounted for, and the themes that emerge when actors relate to the different scripts