The Significance of Emotions and Professional Relations for Accommodating a Web-Based Ulcer Record and Improving Home-Based Care
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/8733Date
2015-01-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Ekeland, Anne G.Abstract
Evidence of technological performance, medical improvements and economic
effectiveness is generally considered sufficient for judging advances in healthcare. In this
paper, I aim to add knowledge about the ways human emotions and professional relations
play roles in the processes of accommodating new technologies for quality improvements.
A newly-implemented, web-based ulcer record service for patients with chronic skin ulcers
constitutes the case. After one year, only a few home care nurses were using the service, interacting
with a specialist team. The result was disappointing, but the few users were enthusiastic.
An explorative, qualitative study was initiated to understand the users, the processes that
accounted for use and how improvements were enacted. In the paper, I expose the emotional
aspects of the record accommodation by analyzing the ways emotions were translated in the
process and how they influenced the improvements. I contend that use came about through a
heterogeneous assemblage of ethical engagement and compassionate emotions stemming from
frustration, combined with technological affordances and relations between different professionals.
Certain aspects of the improvements are exposed. These are discussed as: (1) reconciliations
between the medical facts and rational judgments, on one side, and the emotional and
subjective values for judging quality, on the other; and (2) mediation between standardized
and personalized care. The healing of ulcers was combined with a sense of purpose and
wellbeing to validate improvements. Emotions were strongly involved, and the power of
evaluative emotions and professional relations should be further explored to add to the
understanding of innovation processes and to validate quality improvements.
Description
Published version. Source at http://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare3010020.