Authors
Barbara E Gibson, Joanna K Fadyl, Gareth Terry, Kate Waterworth, Donya Mosleh, Nicola M Kayes
Publication date
2021/9/2
Journal
Health Sociology Review
Volume
30
Issue
3
Pages
292-307
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
In this paper, we examine person-centred care through a Deleuzian posthuman lens with the aim of exploring what becomes possible when the concepts of both person and care are de-centred. We do so through a consideration of the sets of relations that produce ‘the client’ in health care contexts. Our analysis maps particular entangled material-semiotic forces producing ‘M/michael’, a young man with a diagnosis of Duchenne muscular dystrophy, within a rehabilitation clinic. Drawing on Deleuzian notions of assemblage, affect, and becoming we explore ‘person-care’ as an active production that dynamically enacts persons-as-clients through clinical arrangements. Persons are thus reconceptualised in terms of locally produced subject positions and their care relations, rather than pre-existing beings who can be ‘centred’ within health services. Paradoxically, by de-centring persons and care, we work to conjure …
Total citations
202120222023202433123
Scholar articles
BE Gibson, JK Fadyl, G Terry, K Waterworth, D Mosleh… - Health Sociology Review, 2021