Abstract

ABSTRACT In this study, we discuss how email consultations in general practice operate as a temporal technology, transforming working conditions and power relations between general practitioners (GPs) and patients. We draw on empirical material from Denmark in the form of a set of 68 semi-structured interviews with patients aged 65 + and two focus group discussions with 17 GPs. Our theoretical point of departure stems primarily from media theorist Sarah Sharma’s (2014) concept of power-chronography, which describes how power is embedded in temporal relations and everyday life and secondarily from sociologist, Judy Wajcman’s (2015) concept of multiple temporal landscapes. Patients and GPs calibrate their own time and attune their mutual time according to their expectations and ideas about the other party’s time. The patient and the GP can both be viewed as ‘time workers’ and the email consultation as a digital technology fostering the recalibration of one person’s time to that of another, requiring significant labour. The email consultation rearranges the GP-patient boundaries and thereby the power relations. Health institutions ought to consider whose time and labour is being ‘saved’ with digital systems.

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