TY - JOUR
T1 - “Picturephone in My Home”
T2 - Actor-Network Theory and Foucauldian Discourse Analysis on Northern Finnish Older Adults Starting to Use a Video Conferencing Service
AU - Outila, Marjo
AU - Kiuru, Hilla
PY - 2021/1/15
Y1 - 2021/1/15
N2 - Technology has been considered an important means to deliver services in a cost-effective manner in societies that are aging and implementing austerity policies. In this article, we analyze older adults’ use of assistive technology, the picturephone, in home care by combining actor-network theory (ANT) and Foucauldian discourse analysis (FDA). We also apply Foucault’s concepts of technologies of the self, regimen, and resistance. Our research materials consist of interviews with eight Northern Finnish older adults and observation data. According to our results, technological translation takes place when users associate picturephone technology with the discourses on health and safety, connectedness, and/or learning. When the technology discourse collides with or deviates from these discourses, it disrupts the technological translation, and older adults do not include the picturephone technology in their regimen, their daily life. In Finland, care policy favors technology and pursues its adoption in older adults’ care. In our case, private companies, care workers, technology advisers, family members, and older adults are recruited to join this effort. Older adults’ position in their social-material networks varies strongly in the different phases of the translation, and their technologies of the self have a significant effect on its outcome. This should be considered when designing and utilizing ICT technologies in elderly care.
AB - Technology has been considered an important means to deliver services in a cost-effective manner in societies that are aging and implementing austerity policies. In this article, we analyze older adults’ use of assistive technology, the picturephone, in home care by combining actor-network theory (ANT) and Foucauldian discourse analysis (FDA). We also apply Foucault’s concepts of technologies of the self, regimen, and resistance. Our research materials consist of interviews with eight Northern Finnish older adults and observation data. According to our results, technological translation takes place when users associate picturephone technology with the discourses on health and safety, connectedness, and/or learning. When the technology discourse collides with or deviates from these discourses, it disrupts the technological translation, and older adults do not include the picturephone technology in their regimen, their daily life. In Finland, care policy favors technology and pursues its adoption in older adults’ care. In our case, private companies, care workers, technology advisers, family members, and older adults are recruited to join this effort. Older adults’ position in their social-material networks varies strongly in the different phases of the translation, and their technologies of the self have a significant effect on its outcome. This should be considered when designing and utilizing ICT technologies in elderly care.
KW - Actor-network theory
KW - care services
KW - Foucauldian discourse analysis
KW - ICT
KW - older adults
KW - video conferencing service
KW - Actor-network theory
KW - care services
KW - discourse analysis
KW - information and communications technology
KW - technology policy
KW - video conferences
KW - Activities of Daily Living
KW - older people
KW - everyday life
KW - ageing
KW - care for the elderly
KW - communications technology
KW - Home Health Nursing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85099450247&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85099450247&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/15228835.2020.1869670
DO - 10.1080/15228835.2020.1869670
M3 - Article
SN - 1522-8835
VL - 39
SP - 163
EP - 192
JO - Journal of Technology in Human Services
JF - Journal of Technology in Human Services
IS - 2
ER -