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      Turning the gaze: Digital patient feedback and the silent pathology of the NHS

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          Abstract

          Online review and rating sites, where patients can leave feedback on their experience of the health-care encounter, are becoming an increasing feature of primary care in the NHS. Previous research has analysed how digital surveillance is re-shaping the clinical gaze, as health-care professionals are subject to increased public monitoring. Here, we draw on an empirical study of 41 GP practice staff to show how the gaze is turning, not simply from the patient to the health-care provider, but additionally to the body politic of the NHS. Drawing on focus group and interview data conducted in five UK practices, we show how discourses of online reviews and ratings are producing new professional subjectivities among health-care professionals and the extent to which the gaze extends not only to individual health-care interactions but to the health-care service writ large. We identify three counter-discourses characterising the evolving ways in which online reviews and ratings are creating new subjects in primary care practices: victimhood, prosumption versus traditional values and taking control. We show how the ways in which staff speak about online feedback are patterned by the social environment in which they work and the constraints of the NHS they encounter on a day-to-day basis.

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          Most cited references57

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          Self-Tracking for Health and the Quantified Self: Re-Articulating Autonomy, Solidarity, and Authenticity in an Age of Personalized Healthcare

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            Consumerism, reflexivity and the medical encounter.

            D Lupton (1997)
            Much emphasis has been placed recently in sociological, policy and popular discourses on changes in lay people's attitudes towards the medical profession that have been labelled by some as a move towards the embracing of "consumerism". Notions of consumerism tend to assume that lay people act as "rational" actors in the context of the medical encounter. They align with broader sociological concepts of the "reflexive self" as a product of late modernity; that is, the self who acts in a calculated manner to engage in self-improvement and who is sceptical about expert knowledges. To explore the ways that people think and feel about medicine and the medical profession, this article draws on findings from a study involving in-depth interviews with 60 lay people from a wide range of backgrounds living in Sydney. These data suggest that, in their interactions with doctors and other health care workers, lay people may pursue both the ideal-type "consumerist" and the "passive patient" subject position simultaneously or variously, depending on the context. The article concludes that late modernist notions of reflexivity as applied to issues of consumerism fail to recognize the complexity and changeable nature of the desires, emotions and needs that characterize the patient-doctor relationship.
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              M-health and health promotion: The digital cyborg and surveillance society

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                8205036
                Sociol Health Illn
                Sociol Health Illn
                Sociology of health & illness
                0141-9889
                1467-9566
                01 February 2022
                04 December 2021
                10 July 2024
                18 July 2024
                : 44
                : 2
                : 290-307
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Science, Technology and Innovation Studies, School of Social and Political Science, University of Edinburgh ( https://ror.org/01nrxwf90) , Edinburgh, UK
                [2 ]Centre for Biomedicine, Self and Society, University of Edinburgh ( https://ror.org/01nrxwf90) , Edinburgh, UK
                [3 ]Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford ( https://ror.org/052gg0110) , Oxford, UK
                Author notes
                Correspondence Catherine M. Montgomery, Science, Technology and Innovation Studies, School of Social and Political Science, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK Catherine.montgomery@ 123456ed.ac.uk
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5829-6137
                Article
                EMS197455
                10.1111/1467-9566.13419
                7616249
                34862794
                d90be1ac-8b35-48a5-b89c-7bbc488e6964

                This work is licensed under a BY 4.0 International license.

                History
                Categories
                Article

                Sociology
                digital health,foucault,patient experience,primary care
                Sociology
                digital health, foucault, patient experience, primary care

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