Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Technology, Health Care and Person-centeredness: Beyond Utopia and Dystopia. Thinking the Future
With financial support by Stiftelsen Riksbankens Jubileumsfond (The Swedish Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences)
and Karolinska Institutet (Section of Nursing and Dept of Neurobiology, Care sciences and Society)
1130-1230
Registration
1230-1330
Registration
1330-1400
Welcome
Maria Eriksdotter, Head of Department
Ann Langius Eklf, Head of Section
Anette Forss, Conference Chair
1400-1500
1500-1530
Refreshment break
Rooms: 412, 413, 404, 4th floor. Zanderska building, Alfred Nobels all 23
Room: 413
Room: 404
Berit Lindahl
Sweden
Could application and reflections based on Julia
Kristevas philosophy to caring science bring a
deeper understanding of what a life on a
ventilator may be like?
Pia C. Bing-Jonsson
Doris Lydahl
Norway
Sweden
Competence measurements of nurses working in Preserving uniqueness through quasielderly care as quality assurance: conceptual
standardization: the role of templates in personand epistemological concerns
centred care
Hedvig Grndahl
Sweden
Signs of bacteria Enacting Sore Throat
Joakim hln
Sweden
Is it possible to integrate tensions in opposing
views related to notions of individualization and
generalization in palliative care?
Derek Sellman
Canada
Technology, language, standardization, and
thought in nursing: If only it were so simple
1930
http://international.stockholm.se/the-city-hall/
Buffet dinner
Plenary:
Don Ihde, USA
Listening to cancer: A new science
1000-1030
Refreshment break
Room: 413
Room: 404
Tanja Ahlin
The Netherlands & Belgium
Technology in informal elderly care by migrant
Indian nurses
Mark Risjord
USA
Evidence and Practical Knowledge
4
Martin Lipscomb
Carina Gransson, Yvonne Wengstrm, Kristina
UK
Ziegert, Annica Kihlgren, Karin Blomberg
Sociological theory in nursing research what is Sweden
required?
The elderly persons experiences of reporting
health status in an ICT-platform
Derek Sellman
Lorretta Camarano & Nancy Smee
Canada
USA
Tips for getting published in Nursing Philosophy Thematic issues and concerns of women
undergoing advanced reproductive technologies
and the interface with consumerism
1230-1400
1400-1500
Plenary:
Peter-Paul Verbeek, The Netherlands
Technologies of care: on human-technology relations
and the ethics of care
1500-1530
Refreshment break
Room: 413
Room: 404
Catherine Green
USA
Nursing, Caring and Technology
1930
Lundy Lewis
USA
Technology as One Entity in a System of
Entities: Social and Ethical Ramifications for
Nursing Care
Ruth Bartlett
UK
From 'wandering' to belonging: re-framing the
actions of men and women with dementia and
use of GPS technologies
Joakim hln
Sweden
Complexities in suffering in the context of
palliative care using the ethical intension
according to Paul Ricoeur as a theoretical
resource
Hilde Thygesen
Norway
Telecare and the "window of opportunity": the
case of GPS tracking in dementia care
5
Lilas Ali, Barbro Krevers, Nils Sjstrm, Ingela
Skrster
Sweden
The impact of a person-centred web-based
intervention on young informal carers of people
with mental illness
Ingela Skrster, Magdalena Barkstrm, Stefan
Bergman, Patrik Dahlqvist Jnsson, Fawzi Halila,
Anne-Christine Hertz, Jens Nygren, Anita SantAnna,
Jeanette Sjberg, Andreas Tylenius
Sweden
Theme Health Innovation at Halmstad University
- research, education and collaboration for
welfare technology
Plenary:
Jeannette Pols, The Netherlands
Good relations with technology. Empirical ethics and
aesthetics in care
1000-1030
Refreshment break
Rooms: 412, 413, 404, 4th floor. Zanderska building, Alfred Nobels all 23
Room: 413
Room: 404
Florence N. Cooper
USA
The Invisible Patient: Caring in the
Technological Preoperative Environment
Francine Wynn
Beverly J. Whelton
Canada
USA
Stiegler's Mnemotechnics of Care: Forming Deep The Theory and Conceptual Systems of Imogene
Attention in Nursing Students
King: An extension of a 2300 year old Athenian
perspective to frame person-centered care for a
global health community in the 21st Century
Karyn Bentley, Tanya Langtree
Adelaida Zabalegui
Australia
Spain
The clinical simulation conundrum. Does
Barcelona Hospital Clnic Nursing Model. A new
simulation diminish the capacity of the student perspective towards excellence
to foster empathy, sensitivity and the ability be
with the person?
Kristin Jordal, Kristin Heggen, Kari Nyheim
Margareth Kristoffersen & Febe Friberg
Solbrkke
Norway
Norway
Considering destructive demands within
Exploring the relationship between technology relationship-based nursing care relevant or
and care: A qualitative study of clinical practice not?
for nursing students
Ann-Christin Karlsson
Sweden
Technical monitoring vs. patient-nurse
interaction in a surgical setting
1230-1345
Paper presentation
The nursing yet-to-come: A meditation in three voices
In recognition of Dr. John S. Drummond
Location/details:
H3 Blue, ground floor, Zanderska Building, Alfred
Nobels all 23
Lunch sandwich provided to attendees
Plenary:
Bengt Kristenson Uggla. Sweden
Title: to be announced
1445-1500
Refreshment break
Room: 413
Room: 404
Asle H. Kiran
Norway
Mediating good patienthood From an ethics of
technology to an ethics with technology
Kristin Bjornsdottir
Iceland
Do we need to use such big words? Living at
home with end-stage heart failure
Moa Goysdotter
Sweden
Health anxiety in a digital age
Pawel J. Krol
Canada
Beyond Sanitary Dystopia and the End of
Nursing : Redemption of the Nietzschean
Overman
Brigitte S. Cypress
USA
Transformation: Experiences of Patients, their
Families and Nurses during Critical Illness in the
ICU
Lilas Ali; Birgit Heckemann, Inger Ekman
Catharina Lindberg, Bengt Sivberg, Ania Willman,
Sweden
Cecilia Fagerstrm
Meeting the support needs of people suffering Sweden
from COPD or CHF in Sweden: Exploring factors A trajectory towards partnership in care that enable the design of person-centred eHealth patients' experiences of autonomy in intensive
partnership service in Sweden - A qualitative
care
study
Maurice Nagington, Karen Luker, Catherine Walshe Agness C. Tembo, Isabel Higgins, Vicki Parker
UK
Australia.
(Re)creating the home: The morality of
Critical Illness as a Biographical Disruption
technology in the home in relation to district
nursing palliative care
1630
Closing remarks