Abstract

BackgroundHealth and care technologies often succeed on a small scale but fail to achieve widespread use (scale-up) or become routine practice in other settings (spread). One reason for this is under-theorization of the process of scale-up and spread, for which a potentially fruitful theoretical approach is to consider the adoption and use of technologies as social practices.ObjectiveThis study aimed to use an in-depth case study of assisted living to explore the feasibility and usefulness of a social practice approach to explaining the scale-up of an assisted-living technology across a local system of health and social care.MethodsThis was an individual case study of the implementation of a Global Positioning System (GPS) “geo-fence” for a person living with dementia, nested in a much wider program of ethnographic research and organizational case study of technology implementation across health and social care (Studies in Co-creating Assisted Living Solutions [SCALS] in the United Kingdom). A layered sociological analysis included micro-level data on the index case, meso-level data on the organization, and macro-level data on the wider social, technological, economic, and political context. Data (interviews, ethnographic notes, and documents) were analyzed and synthesized using structuration theory.ResultsA social practice lens enabled the uptake of the GPS technology to be studied in the context of what human actors found salient, meaningful, ethical, legal, materially possible, and professionally or culturally appropriate in particular social situations. Data extracts were used to illustrate three exemplar findings. First, professional practice is (and probably always will be) oriented not to “implementing technologies” but to providing excellent, ethical care to sick and vulnerable individuals. Second, in order to “work,” health and care technologies rely heavily on human relationships and situated knowledge. Third, such technologies do not just need to be adopted by individuals; they need to be incorporated into personal habits and collaborative routines (both lay and professional).ConclusionsHealth and care technologies need to be embedded within sociotechnical networks and made to work through situated knowledge, personal habits, and collaborative routines. A technology that “works” for one individual in a particular set of circumstances is unlikely to work in the same way for another in a different set of circumstances. We recommend the further study of social practices and the application of co-design principles. However, our findings suggest that even if this occurs, the scale-up and spread of many health and care technologies will be neither rapid nor smooth.

Highlights

  • BackgroundIncreasing the uptake of digital health and care technologies is a policy priority around the world

  • The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of theories of social practice and to illustrate their value in understanding efforts to achieve spread and scale of health and care technologies through a single case example of the adoption of a Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking device for people living with dementia

  • To illustrate how a social practice approach can allow analysis of both proximal and distal contextual influences on spread and scale-up, we describe an example of the implementation of a care technology—a Global Positioning System (GPS) “geo-fence” for people with dementia

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Summary

Introduction

BackgroundIncreasing the uptake of digital health and care technologies is a policy priority around the world. In the United Kingdom, a reimbursement program was announced in 2016 to support “medtech innovations” intended to “help cut the hassle experienced by clinicians and innovators in getting uptake and spread across the NHS” [2] These new policy programs are based on the assumption that if a health technology has been demonstrated as effective and cost saving (sometimes merely on the anticipation of efficacy and efficiency), its widespread adoption should be supported across the system as a whole. In order to “work,” health and care technologies rely heavily on human relationships and situated knowledge Such technologies do not just need to be adopted by individuals; they need to be incorporated into personal habits and collaborative routines (both lay and professional). Our findings suggest that even if this occurs, the scale-up and spread of many health and care technologies will be neither rapid nor smooth

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