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When patient empowerment encounters professional autonomy: The conflict and negotiation process of inscribing an eHealth service

Author

Summary, in English

In Sweden, as in many other European countries, government and public agencies have

promoted the expansion of eHealth over the past years, arguing that this development

enhances patient participation, empowerment and cost efficiency. This paper presents a

longitudinal study of the deployment of My medical records on the Internet, a civic service

originally inspired by the home banking concept. The study illustrates how the technology is

developed and inscribed with new norms, dictating access and use. These norms are in turn

shaped by both social and legal norms as well as values and beliefs of several different actors

involved in the development process. Supported by the study, we conclude 1) that the new

technology challenges the medical professionals, thus causing resistance as the institutional

boundaries are changed when patients are given digital access to their medical record, 2) that

the technology changes or inscribes the law, 3) that a pilot project of this type is dependent on

an enthusiast, seeing the project through until it becomes accepted on a larger scale and 4) that

increased patient participation requires improved access to information which differs from the

NPM rhetoric advocating more service to customers.

Publishing year

2015

Language

English

Publication/Series

Scandinavian Journal of Public Administration

Volume

19

Issue

2

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

University of Gothenburg, School of Public Administration

Topic

  • Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Keywords

  • Patient empowerment
  • information technology (IT)
  • medical records
  • New Public Management (NPM)
  • inscriptions

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2001-7413