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Emotional labour in the collaborative data practices of repurposing healthcare data and building data technologies

Choroszewicz, Marta

Big data & society, 2022-01, Vol.9 (1), p.205395172210984 [Periódico revisado por pares]

London, England: SAGE Publications

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  • Título:
    Emotional labour in the collaborative data practices of repurposing healthcare data and building data technologies
  • Autor: Choroszewicz, Marta
  • Assuntos: Collaboration ; Data management ; Data processing ; Emotional labor ; Emotions ; Ethnography ; Experts ; Health care ; Health services ; Social services ; Sociology ; Sociology of emotions
  • É parte de: Big data & society, 2022-01, Vol.9 (1), p.205395172210984
  • Descrição: This article focuses on emotions, conceptualised as emotional labour, evoked during data practices used to repurpose and enable healthcare data journeys for Finnish public healthcare. Combined approaches from critical data studies and the sociology of emotions were used to contribute to a better understanding of the mundane but often invisible work of the emotions of experts involved in data practices, such as facilitating data journeys and building data technologies. The article is based on a two-and-a-half-year ethnographic study conducted in a Finnish regional public healthcare and social service organisation. The study results were derived from the analysis of 39 interviews and fieldnotes produced by observing 170 h of various meetings, events and work activities performed by experts. The results were organised into three forms of observed experts’ emotional labour related to three phases of healthcare data journeys: (a) caring for data production and preparing data for travel, (b) managing excitement and frustration in data processing for continually building the data management system, and (c) reassuring users in making sense of obtained data analytics. The results contribute to a greater understanding of the emotions and emotional labour generated by healthcare data journeys and in relation to the volatile nature of healthcare data and the collaborative character of data practices. This work advocates for a better recognition of the emotional aspects of data practices and their implications on data-based knowledge and datafication processes in healthcare.
  • Editor: London, England: SAGE Publications
  • Idioma: Inglês

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