Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7458685 | Health & Place | 2014 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Since the 1960s, hemodialysis has been a common intervention for children with end-stage renal disease, however little is known about how they experience hospital-based hemodialysis. A focused ethnography was undertaken to explore children׳s perspectives of the time, space and technology of a hemodialysis unit at a Canadian pediatric urban hospital. The children׳s temporal and socio-spatial positions were an effect of their technologically mediated embodiment and shaped their perspectives, evaluations and expectations. The findings suggest that further explorations are needed to envision ways to create with children an overall positive place that merges and balances technological care with child focused care.
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Authors
Hilde Zitzelsberger, Patricia McKeever, Elizabeth Peter, Adrienne Chambon, Kathryn P. Morgan, Karen Spalding,