Digital Health | |
When self-tracking enters physical rehabilitation: From âpushedâ self-tracking to ongoing affective encounters in arrangements of care: | |
Nete Schwennesen1  | |
关键词: Self-tracking; physical rehabilitation; ethnography; socio-material; care arrangement; | |
DOI : 10.1177/2055207617725231 | |
学科分类:卫生学 | |
来源: Sage Journals | |
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【 摘 要 】
In this paper, I explore what happens when self-tracking technologies and devices travel into the context of physical rehabilitation and come to constitute what Lupton has called âpushedâ self-tracking. By unpacking the processes through which a self-tracking technology is put to use in physical rehabilitation in Denmark, and the kind of relationships patients and healthcare providers establish with and through this technology, I illustrate how a new geography of responsibility is constituted, where responsibility for professional guidance is delegated to the technology and patients are expected to produce and engage in movement data. In contrast to the image of âpushingâ as a single activity where one part (technology) has the authority to push the other (patient) to act in certain ways, I argue that âthe pushâ is better described as an ongoing and contingent process that evolves through affective and affecting encounters between human (patients, healthcare providers) and nonhuman (technology, algorithms, software) actors. I illustrate that even though responsibility is delegated to the technology, it is unable to make bodies move by itself. Rather, what determines what âitâ becomes and how âitâ comes to act is enabled by the constitution of a wider arrangement of care and the arrangementsâ ability to affect and respond to particular bodies.
【 授权许可】
CC BY-NC
【 预 览 】
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RO201902026089351ZK.pdf | 271KB | ![]() |