Beyond the realist turn: a socio-material analysis of heart failure self-care.
| Author | |
|---|---|
| Abstract | 
   :  
              For patients living with chronic illnesses, self-care has been linked with positive outcomes such as decreased hospitalisation, longer lifespan, and improved quality of life. However, despite calls for more and better self-care interventions, behaviour change trials have repeatedly fallen short on demonstrating effectiveness. The literature on heart failure (HF) stands as a case in point, and a growing body of HF studies advocate realist approaches to self-care research and policymaking. We label this trend the 'realist turn' in HF self-care. Realist evaluation and realist interventions emphasise that the relationship between self-care interventions and positive health outcomes is not fixed, but contingent on social context. This paper argues socio-materiality offers a productive framework to expand on the idea of social context in realist accounts of HF self-care. This study draws on 10 interviews as well as researcher reflections from a larger study exploring health care teams for patients with advanced HF. Leveraging insights from actor-network theory (ANT), this study provides two rich narratives about the contextual factors that influence HF self-care. These descriptions portray not self-care contexts but self-care assemblages, which we discuss in light of socio-materiality.  | 
        
| Year of Publication | 
   :  
              2018 
           | 
        
| Journal | 
   :  
              Sociology of health & illness 
           | 
        
| Volume | 
   :  
              40 
           | 
        
| Issue | 
   :  
              1 
           | 
        
| Number of Pages | 
   :  
              218-233 
           | 
        
| ISSN Number | 
   :  
              0141-9889 
           | 
        
| URL | 
   :  
              http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.12675 
           | 
        
| DOI | 
   :  
              10.1111/1467-9566.12675 
           | 
        
| Short Title | 
   :  
              Sociol Health Illn 
           | 
        
| Download citation |