4.2 Article

Exploring engagement with digital screens for collecting patient feedback in clinical waiting rooms: The role of touch and place

Journal

HEALTH
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 454-474

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1363459319889097

Keywords

ethnography; health policy; technology in healthcare

Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) HSDR programme [14/156/16]

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Health service settings are increasingly adopting digital devices to promote patient engagement and improve service responsiveness. However, limited understanding of the mechanisms and contexts for digital engagement remains, highlighting the need for further research. Digital inequalities can impact the design and development of digital innovations in healthcare and contribute to inequalities associated with the implementation of new digital technologies.
Health service settings are increasingly installing digital devices to enable people to engage digitally with multiple processes, including automated 'check-in', as well as collecting feedback on experiences of care. In addition, policy is increasingly driving digital agendas to promote patient engagement with online services, management of health records and routine monitoring. While this tendency towards widespread digital diffusion has been viewed as a means of enabling greater empowerment of patients and improved responsiveness of services to 'patient voice', social scientists have provided critical insights on the use of digital technologies in practice. However, there remains limited understanding of the mechanisms and contexts for digital engagement. In particular, there is a need for further research on the sensory and spatial aspects of engagement that are integral to everyday use (or non-use) of technology in practice. This article reports new insights from detailed qualitative case studies utilising in-depth interviews with patients, carers and staff, in addition to ethnographic observations of different digital modalities and their usage in specific health care contexts. A sociomaterial approach and concepts of affective atmosphere and technogeography are drawn upon to analyse the role of touch and place in the collection of digital feedback in multiple waiting room settings for people with physical and mental health long-term conditions. The findings highlight how barriers to engagement varied by context such as particular concerns about privacy for those with mental health problems and physical and sensory barriers for those with physical impairments. The findings demonstrate how digital inequalities can play out in practice and have implications for the design and development of digital innovations and tackling inequalities that may be associated with implementation of new digital technologies in healthcare.

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