Abstract

BackgroundMost western countries are experiencing greater pressure on community care services due to increased life expectancy and changes in policy toward prioritizing independent living. This has led to a demand for change and innovation in caring practices with an expected increased use of technology. Despite numerous attempts, it has proven surprisingly difficult to implement and adopt technological innovations. The main established technological innovation in home care services for older people is the personal emergency response system (PERS), which is widely adopted and used throughout most western countries aiming to support “aging safely in place.”ObjectiveThis integrative review examines how research literature describes use of the PERS focusing on the users’ perspective, thus exploring how different actors experience the technology in use and how it affects the complex interactions between multiple actors in caring practices.MethodsThe review presents an overview of the body of research on this well-established telecare solution, indicating what is important for different actors in regard to accepting and using this technology in community care services. An integrative review, recognized by a systematic search in major databases followed by a review process, was conducted.ResultsThe search resulted in 33 included studies describing different actors’ experiences with the PERS in use. The overall focus was on the end users’ experiences and the consequences of having and using the alarm, and how the technology changes caring practices and interactions between the actors.ConclusionsThe PERS contributes to safety and independent living for users of the alarm, but there are also unforeseen consequences and possible improvements in the device and the integrated service. This rather simple and well-established telecare technology in use interacts with the actors involved, creating changes in daily living and even affecting their identities. This review argues for an approach to telecare in which the complexity of practice is accounted for and shows how the plug-and-play expectations producers tend to generate is a simplification of the reality. This calls for a recognition that place and actors matter, as does a sensitivity to technology as an integrated part of complex caring practices.

Highlights

  • BackgroundWestern societies have an ageing population due to increased life expectancy and large cohorts in the postwar years, presenting growing challenges to long-term care services [1,2]

  • Through focusing on the usersperspectives, this review explores how different actors experience the technology in use and how it affects the complex interactions between multiple actors in caring practices

  • The key objectives of this integrative review were to explore existing research on the personal emergency response system (PERS) and to seek insight into how actors experience this technology in use in home care services, providing a richer and more nuanced view of how actors interact with technologies in caring practices

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Summary

Introduction

BackgroundWestern societies have an ageing population due to increased life expectancy and large cohorts in the postwar years, presenting growing challenges to long-term care services [1,2]. Most western countries are experiencing greater pressure on community care services due to increased life expectancy and changes in policy toward prioritizing independent living This has led to a demand for change and innovation in caring practices with an expected increased use of technology. Objective: This integrative review examines how research literature describes use of the PERS focusing on the users’ perspective, exploring how different actors experience the technology in use and how it affects the complex interactions between multiple actors in caring practices. Conclusions: The PERS contributes to safety and independent living for users of the alarm, but there are unforeseen consequences and possible improvements in the device and the integrated service This rather simple and well-established telecare technology in use interacts with the actors involved, creating changes in daily living and even affecting their identities. This calls for a recognition that place and actors matter, as does a sensitivity to technology as an integrated part of complex caring practices

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