Making sense of patient expertise
In: Social theory & health, Volume 7, Issue 1, p. 1-19
ISSN: 1477-822X
34 results
Sort by:
In: Social theory & health, Volume 7, Issue 1, p. 1-19
ISSN: 1477-822X
In: Human relations: towards the integration of the social sciences, Volume 59, Issue 7, p. 993-1016
ISSN: 1573-9716, 1741-282X
Competence and competence development are 'buzz words' widely used in organizations in Norway, as well as in other countries. Competence, as the company's most important and valuable resource, is constantly highlighted. But what does this imply for the organization and for the employees? What are comprised in the concept of competence? In this article we present different understandings of competence among employees in a large Norwegian oil company, Statoil, as well as some of the different views on competence found in the literature. Based on semi-structured interviews in two different stages of a process of implementing a netbased learning system, we find that the focus is more on competence as asset than competence as process. This leaves out important dimensions of competence in the complex society of today and as expressed by several of the employees in Statoil.
In: Norsk sosiologisk tidsskrift, Volume 7, Issue 3, p. 1-16
ISSN: 2535-2512
In: Qualitative research, Volume 23, Issue 3, p. 545-560
ISSN: 1741-3109
In this article, we explore methodological considerations of using the car as space for ethnographic research on police work. With a socio-material perspective, we are concerned about how the car's particular materiality and mobility shapes social interaction that takes place within it. We argue that this affects the researcher role, and that the researcher's spatial position in the car affects the researcher role further. The position's impact on interaction is made evident when the researcher is 'riding shotgun', rather than being placed in the back seat. We argue that this front-seat role comes with increased reciprocity towards the driver/officer, demanding a more (inter) active research practice. Hence, the riding shotgun position potentially increases the empirical input with the closer interaction between the researched and the researcher. More generally, the case illustrates the very delicate considerations of researcher positioning within ethnography on the move.
In: Sociology: the journal of the British Sociological Association, Volume 52, Issue 2, p. 351-366
ISSN: 1469-8684
Given the pervasiveness of free Wi-Fi zones in cafes, use of laptops, tablets and smart phones supports the transformation of cafes from social spaces to work spaces for many customers. In this article we analyse, on the basis of an ethnographic study of individuals' laptop work in urban cafes in Norway and the UK, (1) what it is about cafes that makes people visit them for working purposes, and (2) how individual laptop work changes the social life of such venues. By linking our analysis to theories of communal processes and the domestication of technologies, we put forward the concept of 'situational domestication', encompassing the aspects of socially embedded individual working. Consequently, the close study of how cafe spaces are being used for work offers insights into how progressively technologised work and work habits influence not only work itself, but also public space at a broader level.
In: Sosiologisk tidsskrift: journal of sociology, Volume 24, Issue 4, p. 281-302
ISSN: 1504-2928
In: Urban studies, Volume 51, Issue 10, p. 2111-2124
ISSN: 1360-063X
It has been suggested that community, social cohesion and territorial ties in neighbourhoods may be characterised by three directions: the lost, the saved and the transformed. On the basis of a number of case studies in a Norwegian city, it is found that these three trends exist together, on the basis of various local interactive practices. The concept of an interaction pretext is developed to answer in a more nuanced way how various forms of social ties are developed, maintained and/or altered. By combining this concept with local activity, four community types are specified that may characterise different neighbourhoods and that may also exist in parallel at one place: the passing-by community, the tight community, the weak community, and the split community. Demonstrating the potential of a more detailed empirical approach to the community question, the paper warns against too analytically shallow suggestions about their development. By understanding how neighbourhoods develop socially in different ways, it may be possible to increase the probability of better community planning.
In: Nordic journal of wellbeing and sustainable welfare development: Nordisk tidsskrift for livskvalitet og baerekraftig velferdsutvikling, Volume 2, Issue 2, p. 6-21
ISSN: 2703-9986
In: Societies: open access journal, Volume 10, Issue 4, p. 78
ISSN: 2075-4698
The smartphone has become the most ubiquitous piece of personal technology, giving it significant social importance and sociological relevance. In this article, we explore how the smartphone interacts with and impacts social interaction in the setting of the urban café. Through analyzing 52 spontaneous in-depth interviews related to social interaction in cafés, we identify three categories of smartphone use in social settings: interaction suspension, deliberately shielding interaction, and accessing shareables. These categories comprise the constitutive smartphone practices that define the social order of public smartphone use within an interactionist sociological framework.
In: Tidsskrift for velferdsforskning, Volume 22, Issue 2, p. 146-162
ISSN: 2464-3076
In: Norsk sosiologisk tidsskrift, Volume 7, Issue 6, p. 1-17
ISSN: 2535-2512
In: Tidsskrift for boligforskning, Volume 3, Issue 2, p. 148-163
ISSN: 2535-5988
In: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-684X/15/61
Abstract Background Implementation of quality improvements in palliative care (PC) is challenging, and detailed knowledge about factors that may facilitate or hinder implementation is essential for success. One part of the EU-funded IMPACT project (IMplementation of quality indicators in PAlliative Care sTudy) aiming to increase the knowledge base, was to conduct national studies in PC services. This study aims to identify factors perceived as barriers or facilitators for improving PC in cancer and dementia settings in Norway. Methods Individual, dual-participant and focus group interviews were conducted with 20 employees working in different health care services in Norway: two hospitals, one nursing home, and two local medical centers. Thematic analysis with a combined inductive and theoretical approach was applied. Results Barriers and facilitators were connected to (1) the innovation (e.g. credibility, advantage, accessibility, attractiveness); (2) the individual professional (e.g. motivation, PC expertise, confidence); (3) the patient (e.g. compliance); (4) the social context (e.g. leadership, culture of change, face-to-face contact); (5) the organizational context (e.g. resources, structures/facilities, expertise); (6) the political and economic context (e.g. policy, legislation, financial arrangements) and (7) the implementation strategy (e.g. educational, meetings, reminders). Four barriers that were particular to PC were identified: the poor general condition of patients in need of PC, symptom assessment tools that were not validated in all patient groups, lack of PC expertise and changes perceived to be at odds with staff's philosophy of care. Conclusion When planning an improvement project in PC, services should pay particular attention to factors associated with their chosen implementation strategy. Leaders should also involve staff early in the improvement process, ensure that they have the necessary training in PC and that the change is consistent with the staff's philosophy of care. An important consideration when implementing a symptom assessment tool is whether or not the tool has been validated for the relevant patient group, and to what degree patients need to be involved when using the tool.
BASE
In: Societies: open access journal, Volume 11, Issue 3, p. 73
ISSN: 2075-4698
This article is motivated by the excessive success of Apple's iPad, introduced in 2010, questioning the motives for acquiring the product at the time of launch. The purpose is to understand the decision to buy an expensive product that had a fairly undefined use. On the basis of in-depth interviews of 'early-buyers' ('early adopters') of the iPad, we examine, in this article, justifications for the acquisition of such an 'open technology' use. Using theories of consumer society (Veblen, Bauman, Debord), Protestant ethics (Weber), impression management (Goffman, Leary) and group identity (Maffesoli), we develop, in the analysis, the concept of shameful technological impertinence concerning the ambiguity between frugality as value and consumer-based identity related to the latest technology. A reflection on this concept contributes to an understanding of how excessive technology consumption, on the one hand is followed by an unashamed desire to show off new 'gadgets' and on the other hand, a more shameful self-presentation defending the purchase. Today, just over ten years after the launch of the iPad and our interviews, the iPad is taken for granted as a central platform for a number of applications, for everything from personal entertainment to work- and school-related use. In light of this, we conclude with a reflection on how shameful technological impertinence as a more generic concept will be relevant in some phases rather than others, as new innovations are brought into use. The project is limited to the first iPad and its users, and further research could investigate a larger array of consumer electronics and how attitudes towards buying could be increasingly influenced by a growing concern about the abuse of natural resources.
In: Health and Technology, Volume 8, Issue 1-2, p. 111-117
ISSN: 2190-7196