Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Stephen Timmons , Paraskevas Vezyridis , Opinder Sahota
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Nottingham University Business School Nottingham UK, Department of Healthcare of Older People Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust Nottingham UK
ANO 2019
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Sociology of Health and Illness
ISSN 0141-9889
E-ISSN 1467-9566
EDITORA Wiley-Blackwell
DOI 10.1111/1467-9566.12889
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 46f988be0e64e35fc19b0dc69b52039f

Resumo

This paper analyses the 'failure' of a patient safety intervention. Our study was part of a randomised controlled trial (RCT) of bed and bedside chair pressure sensors linked to radio pagers to prevent bedside falls in older people admitted to hospital. We use agential realism within science and technology studies to examine the fall and its prevention as a situated phenomenon of knowledge that is made and unmade through intra‐actions between environment, culture, humans and technologies. We show that neither the intervention (the pressure sensor system), nor the outcome (fall prevention) could be disentangled from the broader sociomaterial context of the ward, the patients, the nurses and (especially) their work through the RCT. We argue that the RCT design, by virtue of its unacknowledged assumptions, played a part in creating the negative findings. The study also raises wider questions about the kind of subjectivities, agencies and power relations these entanglements might effect and (re)produce in the hospital ward.

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