Remaking critical care: Place, body work and the materialities of care in the COVID intensive care unit

Author:

Montgomery Catherine M.12ORCID,Docherty Annemarie B.34,Humphreys Sally56,McCulloch Corrienne4,Pattison Natalie67,Sturdy Steve12

Affiliation:

1. Science, Technology & Innovation Studies University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

2. Centre for Biomedicine, Self and Society University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

3. Centre for Medical Informatics The Usher Institute University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

4. Diagnostics, Anaesthetics, Theatres and Critical Care NHS Lothian Edinburgh UK

5. Critical Care and Research & Development West Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust Suffolk UK

6. School of Health and Social Work University of Hertfordshire Hertfordshire UK

7. Nursing East and North Hertfordshire NHS Trust Stevenage UK

Abstract

AbstractIn this article, we take forward sociological ways of knowing care‐in‐practice, in particular work in critical care. To do so, we analyse the experiences of staff working in critical care during the first wave of the COVID‐19 pandemic in the UK. This moment of exception throws into sharp relief the ways in which work and place were reconfigured during conditions of pandemic surge, and shows how critical care depends at all times on the co‐constitution of place, practices and relations. Our analysis draws on sociological and anthropological work on the material culture of health care and its sensory instantiations. Pursuing this through a study of the experiences of 40 staff across four intensive care units (ICUs) in 2020, we provide an empirical and theoretical elaboration of how place, body work and care are mutually co‐constitutive. We argue that the ICU does not exist independently of the constant embodied work of care and place‐making which iteratively constitute critical care as a total system of relations.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Medical Research Scotland

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Health (social science)

Reference56 articles.

1. Anon. (2020).Prime Minister's statement on coronavirus (COVID‐19): 23 March 2020[Online]. Retrieved February 13 2023 fromhttps://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/pm‐address‐to‐the‐nation‐on‐coronavirus‐23‐march‐2020

2. Posthumanist Performativity: Toward an Understanding of How Matter Comes to Matter

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