Decayed Teeth & Abjection - How care systems can transform emotional approaches to bodily care work

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskning

Standard

Decayed Teeth & Abjection - How care systems can transform emotional approaches to bodily care work. / Christensen, Louise Kathrine Folker.

2023. Abstract fra 6th Nordic STS Conference 2023, Oslo, Norge.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskning

Harvard

Christensen, LKF 2023, 'Decayed Teeth & Abjection - How care systems can transform emotional approaches to bodily care work', 6th Nordic STS Conference 2023, Oslo, Norge, 07/06/2023 - 09/06/2023.

APA

Christensen, L. K. F. (2023). Decayed Teeth & Abjection - How care systems can transform emotional approaches to bodily care work. Abstract fra 6th Nordic STS Conference 2023, Oslo, Norge.

Vancouver

Christensen LKF. Decayed Teeth & Abjection - How care systems can transform emotional approaches to bodily care work. 2023. Abstract fra 6th Nordic STS Conference 2023, Oslo, Norge.

Author

Christensen, Louise Kathrine Folker. / Decayed Teeth & Abjection - How care systems can transform emotional approaches to bodily care work. Abstract fra 6th Nordic STS Conference 2023, Oslo, Norge.

Bibtex

@conference{6d4e3216722d498682968ad2fcc7f063,
title = "Decayed Teeth & Abjection - How care systems can transform emotional approaches to bodily care work",
abstract = "Dental care is an everyday mundane matter, valued for its aesthetic properties, health benefits, and feelings of well-being. However, (Kristeva m.fl. 2018) when welfare services and healthcare professionals take over the daily care of the teeth it raises complex and ethical prioritization questions. Questions that contain both intimate, health-related, professional, systemic, and political dimensions. In our presentation, we will discuss the {\textquoteleft}messy{\textquoteright} practices, where welfare systems and standardized services go hand in hand with intimate bodily care work when older vulnerable people{\textquoteright}s daily, preventive, and curative dental care is taken over by the Danish welfare system. Our point of departure is an ongoing research and co-creation project, Lifelong Oral Health, which we are involved in together with researchers from odontology and two Danish municipalities. The aim of the project is to improve oral health among older people in Danish eldercare. Through ethnographic fieldwork and co-creation activities at different kinds of care units (home care and nursing homes), we experience that prioritization of dental care constantly runs into complex dilemmas where resources (e.g., time and economy), values of good care, different forms of knowledge and policy processes intersect. Moreover, our case raises difficult ethical discussions about the complex situated entanglement between duty of care and neglect of care when e.g., the older person refuses or opposes dental care. And furthermore, we wish to discuss the methodological challenges of the co-creation ambition of the project when it constantly faces priority issues regarding distribution of responsibility between different professional groups and between municipal sections.",
author = "Christensen, {Louise Kathrine Folker}",
year = "2023",
month = jun,
day = "7",
language = "Dansk",
note = "null ; Conference date: 07-06-2023 Through 09-06-2023",
url = "https://www.sv.uio.no/tik/english/research/news-and-events/events/conferences/2023/nordic-sts/panels/universities-and-grand-challenges.html",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Decayed Teeth & Abjection - How care systems can transform emotional approaches to bodily care work

AU - Christensen, Louise Kathrine Folker

N1 - Conference code: 6

PY - 2023/6/7

Y1 - 2023/6/7

N2 - Dental care is an everyday mundane matter, valued for its aesthetic properties, health benefits, and feelings of well-being. However, (Kristeva m.fl. 2018) when welfare services and healthcare professionals take over the daily care of the teeth it raises complex and ethical prioritization questions. Questions that contain both intimate, health-related, professional, systemic, and political dimensions. In our presentation, we will discuss the ‘messy’ practices, where welfare systems and standardized services go hand in hand with intimate bodily care work when older vulnerable people’s daily, preventive, and curative dental care is taken over by the Danish welfare system. Our point of departure is an ongoing research and co-creation project, Lifelong Oral Health, which we are involved in together with researchers from odontology and two Danish municipalities. The aim of the project is to improve oral health among older people in Danish eldercare. Through ethnographic fieldwork and co-creation activities at different kinds of care units (home care and nursing homes), we experience that prioritization of dental care constantly runs into complex dilemmas where resources (e.g., time and economy), values of good care, different forms of knowledge and policy processes intersect. Moreover, our case raises difficult ethical discussions about the complex situated entanglement between duty of care and neglect of care when e.g., the older person refuses or opposes dental care. And furthermore, we wish to discuss the methodological challenges of the co-creation ambition of the project when it constantly faces priority issues regarding distribution of responsibility between different professional groups and between municipal sections.

AB - Dental care is an everyday mundane matter, valued for its aesthetic properties, health benefits, and feelings of well-being. However, (Kristeva m.fl. 2018) when welfare services and healthcare professionals take over the daily care of the teeth it raises complex and ethical prioritization questions. Questions that contain both intimate, health-related, professional, systemic, and political dimensions. In our presentation, we will discuss the ‘messy’ practices, where welfare systems and standardized services go hand in hand with intimate bodily care work when older vulnerable people’s daily, preventive, and curative dental care is taken over by the Danish welfare system. Our point of departure is an ongoing research and co-creation project, Lifelong Oral Health, which we are involved in together with researchers from odontology and two Danish municipalities. The aim of the project is to improve oral health among older people in Danish eldercare. Through ethnographic fieldwork and co-creation activities at different kinds of care units (home care and nursing homes), we experience that prioritization of dental care constantly runs into complex dilemmas where resources (e.g., time and economy), values of good care, different forms of knowledge and policy processes intersect. Moreover, our case raises difficult ethical discussions about the complex situated entanglement between duty of care and neglect of care when e.g., the older person refuses or opposes dental care. And furthermore, we wish to discuss the methodological challenges of the co-creation ambition of the project when it constantly faces priority issues regarding distribution of responsibility between different professional groups and between municipal sections.

M3 - Konferenceabstrakt til konference

Y2 - 7 June 2023 through 9 June 2023

ER -

ID: 375315896