SwePub
Sök i SwePub databas

  Extended search

Träfflista för sökning "WFRF:(Lindberg Jens 1980 ) "

Search: WFRF:(Lindberg Jens 1980 )

  • Result 1-10 of 15
Sort/group result
   
EnumerationReferenceCoverFind
1.
  • Carlsson, Eric, 1972-, et al. (author)
  • Teknografi
  • 2021
  • In: Digitala metoder i humaniora och samhällsvetenskap. - Lund : Studentlitteratur AB. - 9789144140551 ; , s. 45-69
  • Book chapter (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Teknografiska studier undersöker förhållandet mellan teknik, kultur och sociala relationer. Ett sådant perspektiv kan användas för att synliggöra hur teknologier villkorar hur människor agerar, hur deras identiteter formas och hur de blir till som subjekt. I kapitlet exemplifieras hur olika material, såsom digitala vårdappar, innehåll från sociala medier samt intervjuer, kan användas i teknografiskt inspirerade kvalitativa analyser.
  •  
2.
  • Lindberg, Jens, 1980-, et al. (author)
  • Digitala vårdlandskap : kritiska reflektioner om e-hälsa i glesbygden
  • 2018
  • In: Socialmedicinsk Tidskrift. - Stockholm : Socialmedicinsk tidskrift. - 0037-833X. ; 95:1, s. 62-69
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • E-hälsa sägs av många kunna förbättra sjukvården. I den här artikeln undersöker vi föreställningar och idéer om e-hälsa för äldre i glesbygden med sär-skilt fokus på virtuella hälsorum. Vi lyfter fram förhoppningar om digital vård och analyserar på en diskursiv nivå. Artikeln belyser ideologiska föreställningar om sjukvård och problematiserar införandet av digital vårdteknologi. Som material har vi använt olika former av policymaterial. I analysen visar vi hur virtuella hälsorum kopplas ihop med diskurser om delaktighet i vård, aktivt åldrande och glesbygden som problem, och framhåller att det kan ge följder för äldres vård och hälsa. Slutligen påtalar vi behovet att närma sig e-hälsa för äldre i glesbygd från ett problematiserande perspektiv och reflektera kring digitaliseringens följder, nu och i framtiden.
  •  
3.
  • Lindberg, Jens, 1980- (author)
  • How a practice-based approach can contribute to research about help and support for male victims of rape
  • 2023
  • In: Methodological Innovations. - : Sage Publications. - 2059-7991. ; 16:1, s. 57-66
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • While there has been an upsurge of research about human services for male victims of rape, methodological advances are still limited, and significant knowledge gaps remain. Until now, empirical studies have focused almost entirely on human service professionals’ gendered attitudes to try to explain outcomes and victims’ experiences of support. In this article, I argue that research approaches that are based on professionals’ attitudes fail to account for important contextual conditions in policing, healthcare and other human services. My overall aim is thus to introduce greater concern about contextual conditions in human services and provide ways for scholars to approach support for raped men so that different practices, as well as their effects, become visible. To demonstrate the contributions of a practice-based approach to research about support for raped men, an empirical case from a study on police investigation into rape will be analysed and discussed. By using a practice-based approach, it is possible to explore relations between practices performed by organisations, professionals and victims, and highlight the outcomes of such relations. In this way, a practice-based approach can help research progress and contribute to improved services for male rape victims.
  •  
4.
  • Lindberg, Jens, 1980-, et al. (author)
  • Older people and rural eHealth : perceptions of caring relations and their effects on engagement in digital primary health care
  • 2021
  • In: Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences. - : John Wiley & Sons. - 0283-9318 .- 1471-6712. ; 35:4, s. 1322-1331
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Background: The aim of this article is to describe older people's perceptions of caring relations in the context of rural eHealth, as well as to explore how such relations can facilitate engagement in digital primary health care. There is an ongoing implementation of eHealth in Western health care, and rural areas and older people are specifically targeted. eHealth is said to be a solution to emergent problems and a technology that will facilitate people's opportunities to achieve good and equal health. From this perspective, it is crucial that older people engage in eHealth services, but there are barriers for use, and care providers need to adapt to the preferences of older people.Methods: Semi-structured interviews with 19 individuals aged 61-85 were conducted. The participants were using digital services at two primary healthcare centres located in northern Sweden. Qualitative content analysis was used. An important theoretical tenet was that older people's perceptions of and engagements in eHealth are affected by the specific rural conditions. Ethical approval for the study has been obtained.Results: The analysis rendered a total of three themes: in-person interaction was central to people's perceptions of good caring relations; patient-nurse relations were particularly emphasised; and caring relations in rural eHealth appeared to be multi-directional and fuelled by a shared sense of rural community. Altogether, this facilitated participants' engagement in local eHealth initiatives.Conclusions: eHealth is an opportunity for primary health care and for rural communities. However, the results provide insight into matters that can affect the quality, access, and equality of rural primary health care. Participants' engagement in eHealth was almost always facilitated by close caring relations with local Registered Nurses. Digital care needs to be approached as a combination of digital and in-person presence. Separating digital and physical task assignments among different personnel could make older people refrain from seeking health care.
  •  
5.
  • Lindberg, Jens, 1980- (author)
  • Orsak: Våldtäkt : om våldtagna män i medicinsk praktik
  • 2015
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)abstract
    • Within the Swedish healthcare system, the care of raped men varies and many hospitals lack specific programmes. The aim of the thesis is to describe and analyse how meanings about rape and raped men are produced within Swedish healthcare. The central question is how different patient positions and conceptions about the phenomenon of male rape are created through care practices and how, in turn, that affects the care of raped men.The empirical material consists of interviews with healthcare professionals who have worked with raped men, field notes from participant observations and materials such as legislation, care protocols and medical records. In order to analyse how rape and raped men are articulated in practice and to highlight the norms that govern health- and rape care, the material has been analysed from a poststructuralist ‘logics’ perspective.The analysis departs from a number of healthcare settings – two emergency departments, one gynaecological department, one rape clinic, one health crisis recovery unit and a regional healthcare project developing new procedures for the care of raped women, children and men – and their work with predominantly male rape.One of the central aspects of the thesis is that it demonstrates that the care of raped men in many places lack clear procedures and that, consequently, health professionals either draw on ill-suited general care practices or make up new ones as they go. Norms about gender, sexuality, masculinity, rape and patienthood, but also organizational aspects and aspects of professional identity, greatly influence how raped men are treated.In the thesis it is also suggested that rape care is governed by a ’logic of need’. The logic of need is a logic that care professionals and settings need to follow to produce good healthcare, and which emphasizes and recreates differences between how the rape of women and the rape of men are understood. At the same time there are care practices that seek to create equivalences between the rape of men and the rape of women. These alternative articulations of rape care are both in line with, and in some ways challenging, dominant rape care. In doing so they have an impact on what is considered good care for raped men.Above all, the logic of need enables the articulation of established notions of raped men and healthcare’s long-standing preoccupation with good corporeal healthcare. The logic constructs male rape as a specific phenomenon and organises healthcare in such ways that create sometimes unequal health conditions for male victims. The logic limits raped men’s access to certain care practices and in many cases fails to offer raped men an established patient position. This in turn seems to limit the emergence of specially adapted care for that group of patients.
  •  
6.
  • Lindberg, Jens, 1980-, et al. (author)
  • Peer-to-peer sharing in public health interventions : strategies when people share health-related personal information on social media
  • 2024
  • In: International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being. - : Taylor & Francis. - 1748-2623 .- 1748-2631. ; 19:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Purpose: As sharing on social media has become an integrated part of everyday life, health and public health actors have started to show interest in the potential of people’s peer-to-peer sharing of health-related personal information (HRI) for health interventions. In this article we focus on how people make sense of sharing HRI on social media.Methods: Twenty-two people between the ages 40 and 60 who had taken part in a regional health intervention were interviewed. Using theories about social media sharing, we explore their understandings and negotiations about whether, how much, and how to share HRI and discuss the results in relation to peer-to-peer sharing as a strategy in interventions.Results: We identified three aspects that were perceived as particularly risky: loss of control, effects on identity, and affecting others negatively, along with strategies that were used to manage risks in practice: avoiding sharing, allocating, and embedding HRI.Conclusions: By allocating and embedding HRI, people can unlock motivating affordances for health work. However, strategies to manage risks can also be counterproductive. For actors to provide equality in health promotion, initiatives that include social media sharing need to be mindful of the sometimes counterproductive effects this may have on people’s engagement.
  •  
7.
  • Lindberg, Jens, 1980-, et al. (author)
  • Positioning the ageing subject : articulations of choice in Swedish and UK health and social care
  • 2021
  • In: Policy Studies. - : Routledge. - 0144-2872 .- 1470-1006. ; 42:3, s. 289-307
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • What happens when similar measures are being introduced in different national contexts? This article studies the ways in which patient choice has been articulated in public and official reports on health care in the two contexts of Sweden and the UK, whose welfare systems are typically comprehended as different. Specific interest is directed towards the construction of patient positions, and policy documents are analyzed using discourse theory. The results show many similarities between the national contexts; choice is primarily articulated with individuality, autonomy, consumption, and responsibility, as well as with support from state agencies, and patient choice is relentlessly normalized as the way forward. But there are also important differences that reveal that the presuppositions differ, for example, when pinpointing the stakeholders of patient choice reforms and how the different policies work to take the well-known edges off of patient choice ideology.
  •  
8.
  •  
9.
  • Lindberg, Jens, 1980-, et al. (author)
  • The affective atmosphere of rural life and digital healthcare : understanding older persons' engagement in eHealth services
  • 2022
  • In: Journal of Rural Studies. - : Elsevier. - 0743-0167 .- 1873-1392. ; :95, s. 77-85
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • The implementation of digital healthcare technologies—eHealth—is presented as a solution to increasing costs, demographic changes, and quality issues in rural healthcare. Employing the concept of affective atmospheres, this article uses interviews to explore the emotional aspects of digital healthcare among rural persons of advanced age. Our results suggest that participants were clearly influenced by an affective atmosphere that was deeply embedded in spatial imageries as well as in notions of old age. Strong feelings of resignation, necessity, low entitlement, and defiance tended to encourage participants’ wishes for local face-to-face healthcare to translate into viewing eHealth solutions as positive. This also meant that participants came to enact neoliberal identities of “active ageing”. In conclusion, the concept of affective atmospheres highlights how human subjects and digital materialities interact in the production of human emotional responses to digital healthcare technologies, and emphasises how the conditions and shared imageries of geographic space and age are active components in that process.
  •  
10.
  • Lindberg, Jens, 1980-, et al. (author)
  • The ongoing and collective character of digital care for older people : moving beyond techno-determinism in government policy
  • 2022
  • In: Journal of technology in human services. - : Taylor & Francis. - 1522-8835 .- 1522-8991. ; 40:4, s. 357-378
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In this article, we contrast policy understandings of digital care with older people’s day-to-day digital care. In doing so, we discuss problems relating to deterministic approaches in government policy. Our policy analysis shows that digital care is articulated as an individual practice, and digital technologies as static actors. This bears clear marks of techno-deterministic reasoning. Our ethnographic study demonstrates the ongoing and collective character of older people’s digital care. When policy is not aligned with everyday practice, there is a risk of excluding groups of users. We argue that a socio-technical approach in government policy could contribute to achieving important societal goals.
  •  
Skapa referenser, mejla, bekava och länka
  • Result 1-10 of 15

Kungliga biblioteket hanterar dina personuppgifter i enlighet med EU:s dataskyddsförordning (2018), GDPR. Läs mer om hur det funkar här.
Så här hanterar KB dina uppgifter vid användning av denna tjänst.

 
pil uppåt Close

Copy and save the link in order to return to this view