Aarhus Universitets segl

Astrid Meyer udgiver artikel i "Tidsskrift for Forskning I Sygdom Og Samfund"

I artiklen undersøger Meyer hvordan GPS anvendes som et velfærdsteknologi fra et pårørende perspektiv.

The Changing Roles of GPS-Tracking in Dementia Care

Astrid Meyer, der skriver sin Ph.D. afhandling i forbindelse med projektet LIVSTEGN, har udgivet en artikel om GPS'ens rolle i et demensforløb. Artiklen er udgivet i tidsskriftets nyeste udgave vedrørende "Omsorg Under Forandring".


Meyer, A. (2024). The Changing Roles of GPS-Tracking in Dementia Care. Tidsskrift for Forskning I Sygdom Og Samfund, 22(Nr. 40)

Resumé

Global Positioning System (GPS)-tracking is increasingly used to prevent and manage wandering in Danish dementia care. In this article, I follow the first-hand experiences of a woman using GPS-tracking to care for her husband with Alzheimer's at home and after he moves into a nursing home. In doing so, I trace how the GPS-tracker plays many different roles as it is used for different purposes. To conceptualise these changes, I draw on the idea of care arrangements (López Gómez, 2015; Thygesen & Moser, 2010), and understand GPS-tracking as being a part of ever-changing constellations of heterogeneous elements allowing for particular possibilities and restraints in care.

I show how GPS-tracking is a dynamic technology, able to change along with care arrangements. Making GPS-tracking change role does, however, also add tensions and new expectations, which means it not only is shaped by care arrangements but also shapes them. Based on this co-shaping, I argue that GPS-tracking is a 'sticky' technology that clings to the care arrangement. The idea of 'stickiness' is furthermore supported by the way GPS-tracking makes itself seem necessary as it articulates risks in particular ways. By drawing on Buch's notion of care as generative labour (2018), I point to how GPS-tracking produces new responsibilities, which require alert carers. In exploring these tensions and changing roles I aim to add nuance to the use of GPS-tracking and how this technology both can cause and indicate broader changes in dementia care.