Literature DB >> 31599984

Understanding digital health: Productive tensions at the intersection of sociology of health and science and technology studies.

Flis Henwood1, Benjamin Marent1.   

Abstract

In this editorial introduction, we explore how digital health is being explored at the intersection of sociology of health and science and technology studies (STS). We suggest that socio-material approaches and practice theories provide a shared space within which productive tensions between sociology of health and STS can continue. These tensions emerge around the long-standing challenges of avoiding technological determinism while maintaining a clear focus on the materiality and agency of technologies and recognising enduring sets of relations that emerge in new digital health practices while avoiding social determinism. The papers in this Special Issue explore diverse fields of healthcare (e.g. reproductive health, primary care, diabetes management, mental health) within which heterogenous technologies (e.g. health apps, mobile platforms, smart textiles, time-lapse imaging) are becoming increasingly embedded. By synthesising the main arguments and contributions in each paper, we elaborate on four key dimensions within which digital technologies create ambivalence and (re)configure health practices. First, promissory digital health highlights contradictory virtues within discourses that configure digital health. Second, (re)configuring knowledge outlines ambivalences of navigating new information environments and handling quantified data. Third, (re)configuring connectivity explores the relationships that evolve through digital networks. Fourth, (re)configuring control explores how new forms of power are inscribed and handled within algorithmic decision-making in health. We argue that these dimensions offer fruitful perspectives along which digital health can be explored across a range of technologies and health practices. We conclude by highlighting applications, methods and dimensions of digital health that require further research. Chapters
© 2019 The Authors. Book Compilation © 2019 Foundation for the Sociology of Health & Illness/John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Digital health; care; digital sociology; e-health; science and technology studies (STS); socio-materiality; sociotechnical practices; telemedicine

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31599984     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.12898

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  2 in total

1.  COVID-19: Technology, Social Connections, Loneliness, and Leisure Activities: An International Study Protocol.

Authors:  Hannah R Marston; Loredana Ivan; Mireia Fernández-Ardèvol; Andrea Rosales Climent; Madelin Gómez-León; Daniel Blanche-T; Sarah Earle; Pei-Chun Ko; Sophie Colas; Burcu Bilir; Halime Öztürk Çalikoglu; Hasan Arslan; Rubal Kanozia; Ulla Kriebernegg; Franziska Großschädl; Felix Reer; Thorsten Quandt; Sandra C Buttigieg; Paula Alexandra Silva; Vera Gallistl; Rebekka Rohner
Journal:  Front Sociol       Date:  2020-11-19

2.  Social Representations of e-Mental Health Among the Actors of the Health Care System: Free-Association Study.

Authors:  Margot Morgiève; Déborah Sebbane; Pierre Mesdjian; Olivier Las Vergnas; Patrick Bury; Vincent Demassiet; Jean-Luc Roelandt
Journal:  JMIR Ment Health       Date:  2021-05-27
  2 in total

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