DIY gerontechnology: circumventing mismatched technologies and bureaucratic procedure by creating care technologies of one's own
- PMID: 31663618
- DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.13012
DIY gerontechnology: circumventing mismatched technologies and bureaucratic procedure by creating care technologies of one's own
Abstract
This study analyses 'Do-It-Yourself' (DIY) gerontechnologies and shows that they can be viable and valuable alternatives to 'ready-made' gerontechnologies. Using the concept of innosumption, we analyze the work of care workers in gerontechnology showrooms in Norway. We show how and why care workers will sometimes advice older adults to assemble DIY-gerontechnologies. Such DIY-gerontechnologies are not high-tech solutions made by technology producers, but creative solutions that older adults' suit to their specific needs and assemble for themselves from mundane objects that are available in shops. So far, analyses of the design, implementation and use of gerontechnologies have almost exclusively focused on professionally designed and produced 'ready-made' gerontechnologies. But for various reasons, ready-made gerontechnologies often do not fit in well with the lives of older people. In such cases, care workers guide older people to the innosumption of DIY-gerontechnologies that offer workable solutions that are useful, quickly implemented, easily understandable and often cheap. We show that and how the existence of DIY-gerontechnologies questions the reasons behind the strong and widely accepted assumption that only high-tech innovations are a proper solution to the needs of older people.
Keywords: DIY gerontechnology; demographic ageing; innosumption; materiality of care; socio-gerontechnology.
© 2019 The Authors. Sociology of Health & Illness published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Foundation for SHIL.
References
-
- Aceros, J.C., Pols, J. and Domènech, M. (2015) Where is grandma? Home telecare, good aging and the domestication of later life, Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 93, 102-11.
-
- Astell, A. (2013) Technology and fun for a happy old age. In Sixsmith, A. and Gutman, G. (eds.) Technologies for Active Aging. New York: Springer.
-
- Bergschöld, J.M. (2018a). Configuring dementia; how nursing students are taught to shape the sociopolitical role of gerontechnologies. Frontiers in Sociology, 3, 3. https://doi.org/10.3389/fsoc.2018.00003
-
- Bergschöld, J.M. (2018b) Frontline Innovation - How Frontline Care Professionals Innovate Welfare Technology and Services. Trondheim: NTNU. ISBN 978-82-326-3349-4.
-
- Botero, A. and Hyysalo, S. (2013) Ageing together: steps towards evolutionary codesign in everyday practices, CoDesign, 9, 1, 37-54.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
