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Beyond Information : Intimate Relations in Sociotechnical Practice

Identifieur interne : 000C84 ( PascalFrancis/Curation ); précédent : 000C83; suivant : 000C85

Beyond Information : Intimate Relations in Sociotechnical Practice

Auteurs : Maggie Mort [États-Unis] ; Andrew Smith [États-Unis]

Source :

RBID : Francis:09-0396578

Descripteurs français

English descriptors

Abstract

More and faster information will transform our experience of healthcare, according to policymakers, while social.theorists have argued that medicine has become 'informatizad': a new medical paradigm is being shaped. We question both the policy-led conflation of information' and 'healthcare' and ideas about the extent of the informatization of medicine, by exploring how these ideas resonate in medical work, revisiting our studies of expertise in two clinical domains where information technologies are central to practice. The projection of new information programmes as creating knowledge which is independent of space and time runs the risk of devaluing the experiential, haptic and affective knowledge of both apprentices and practitioners. Information, we argue, cannot underpin medicine unless it is recognized and defined as generative, dynamic and intimate, rather than storable and deliverable.
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A08 01  1  ENG  @1 Beyond Information : Intimate Relations in Sociotechnical Practice
A11 01  1    @1 MORT (Maggie)
A11 02  1    @1 SMITH (Andrew)
A14 01      @1 Lancaster University @3 USA @Z 1 aut.
A14 02      @1 Royal Lancaster Infirmary @3 USA @Z 2 aut.
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C01 01    ENG  @0 More and faster information will transform our experience of healthcare, according to policymakers, while social.theorists have argued that medicine has become 'informatizad': a new medical paradigm is being shaped. We question both the policy-led conflation of information' and 'healthcare' and ideas about the extent of the informatization of medicine, by exploring how these ideas resonate in medical work, revisiting our studies of expertise in two clinical domains where information technologies are central to practice. The projection of new information programmes as creating knowledge which is independent of space and time runs the risk of devaluing the experiential, haptic and affective knowledge of both apprentices and practitioners. Information, we argue, cannot underpin medicine unless it is recognized and defined as generative, dynamic and intimate, rather than storable and deliverable.
C02 01  S    @0 52163 @1 XV
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C03 01  S  FRE  @0 Soin médical @5 01
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C03 02  S  FRE  @0 Politique de la santé @5 02
C03 02  S  ENG  @0 Health Policy @5 02
C03 03  S  FRE  @0 Information @5 03
C03 03  S  ENG  @0 Information @5 03
C03 04  S  FRE  @0 Médecine @5 04
C03 04  S  ENG  @0 Medicine @5 04
C03 05  S  FRE  @0 Transmission information @4 INC @5 32
N21       @1 285

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