Displacement and Emplacement of Health Technology

The provision of “closer-to-patient” services has increased in most industrialized countries. However, the migration of services in non-traditional health care settings implies redefining the role of technical and human entities and transforming the nature and use of technologies and places. Drawing on various scholarly efforts to conceptualize space, place, and technology, this paper compares and contrasts satellite and mobile dialysis units implemented in two regions in the province of Quebec, Canada. The satellite units were hosted in two small, local hospitals where nursing staff had been recently trained. The mobile unit was a bus adapted to host five dialysis stations; nurses traveled back and forth between a university teaching hospital and two sites located within a radius of 7.6 miles. In both projects, nephrologists supervised from a distance via a videoconferencing system. Our aim is to illustrate the ways in which the displacement of technical and human entities gives shape to new forms of emplacement in non-traditional health care settings. The satellite and mobile units contributed to the culture of dialysis care and transformed the identity of nurses, doctors, patients, and technologies. By contrasting two projects involving different spatial and clinical logics, we analyze in what ways certain forms of recombination of human and technical entities can prove incomplete but nevertheless acceptable to providers and project managers.

[1]  S. Duckett,et al.  A question of place: medical power in rural Australia. , 2004, Social science & medicine.

[2]  Nigel Thrift,et al.  The future of Geography , 2002 .

[3]  J. Johnson Mixing Humans and Nonhumans Together: The Sociology of a Door-Closer , 1988 .

[4]  Alberto Cambrosio,et al.  The Invisible Topography of Power: Electromagnetic Fields, Bodies and the Environment , 1997 .

[5]  Carl May,et al.  Remote Doctors and Absent Patients: Acting at a Distance in Telemedicine? , 2003 .

[6]  B. Joerges Do Politics Have Artefacts? , 1999 .

[7]  J. Lawton Lay experiences of health and illness: past research and future agendas. , 2003, Sociology of health & illness.

[8]  Ann J. Russ,et al.  “Is There Life on Dialysis?”: Time and Aging in a Clinically Sustained Existence , 2005, Medical anthropology.

[9]  G. Laws Embodiment and Emplacement: Identities, Representation and Landscape in Sun City Retirement Communities , 1995, International journal of aging & human development.

[10]  P. Lehoux,et al.  The use of technology at home: what patient manuals say and sell vs. what patients face and fear. , 2004, Sociology of health & illness.

[11]  S. Barley The alignment of technology and structure through roles and networks. , 1990, Administrative science quarterly.

[12]  A. Mol,et al.  Regions, Networks and Fluids: Anaemia and Social Topology , 1994, Social studies of science.

[13]  Marc Berg,et al.  The practice of medical technology. , 2003, Sociology of health & illness.

[14]  S. Kaufman Hidden places, uncommon persons. , 2003, Social science & medicine.

[15]  P. Lehoux,et al.  How place matters: unpacking technology and power in health and social care. , 2005, Health & social care in the community.

[16]  S. Shapin Placing the View from Nowhere: Historical and Sociological Problems in the Location of Science , 1998 .

[17]  G. Andrews,et al.  Locating a geography of nursing: space, place and the progress of geographical thought. , 2003, Nursing philosophy : an international journal for healthcare professionals.

[18]  J. Malpas Bio-medical Topoi--the dominance of space, the recalcitrance of place, and the making of persons. , 2003, Social science & medicine.

[19]  C. Katz Playing the Field: Questions of Fieldwork in Geography , 1994 .

[20]  Jennie Popay,et al.  A proper place to live: health inequalities, agency and the normative dimensions of space. , 2003, Social science & medicine.

[21]  N. Thrift Movement-space: The changing domain of thinking resulting from the development of new kinds of spatial awareness , 2004 .

[22]  G. Andrews,et al.  Towards a more place-sensitive nursing research: an invitation to medical and health geography. , 2002, Nursing inquiry.

[23]  C. Dunn,et al.  'Even the birds round here cough': stigma, air pollution and health in Teesside. , 2001, Health & place.

[24]  Peter Redfield Beneath a Modern Sky: Space Technology and Its Place on the Ground , 1996 .

[25]  Michael R. Curry,et al.  On the Possibility of Democracy in a Geocoded World , 1999 .

[26]  S. Hinchliffe Technology, Power, and Space—The Means and Ends of Geographies of Technology , 1996 .

[27]  C. Duncan,et al.  Placing geographies of public health , 2002 .

[28]  C. Cartier From home to hospital and back again: economic restructuring, end of life, and the gendered problems of place-switching health services. , 2003, Social science & medicine.