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contain quantitative as well as qualitative data) of how human actors made it happen
despite all the uncertainties, contingencies, inconsistencies, material challenges and
micropolitical hiccups – and how the goals changed (perhaps quite appropriately) as the
project unfolded and contextual influences changed [8].
1.3. Domains of the NASSS framework
Against this background of complexity in health systems, let us now consider the
different domains of the NASSS framework, shown in Figure 1, and the different kinds
of complexity that can occur. Broadly speaking, such complexity can be logistical
(relating to the scale, scope and different inter-related sub-systems involved) or socio-
political (relating to personal, interpersonal or inter-organisational issues such as
differences in values or conflicts of interest).
Domain 1 in the NASSS framework is the condition (perhaps an illness, such as
diabetes, or risk state, such as increased tendency to falls). The human body is of course
a complex system, as is the family and community in which the sick person is cared for.
The most obvious theoretical influences on this domain are biomedical and
epidemiological theories of disease (which often but not always allow prediction of how
the condition and its co-morbidities will progress over time) and pharmacological
theories of how drugs work and interact. In addition, a number of theories of illness (that
is, disease as experienced by the patient) are relevant here. Sociological framings depict
illness as a unique personal (and family) experience which may involve stigma,
biographical disruption, loss of status, reduced income and a heroic struggle to retain
dignity, rebuild identity and live a moral life in the face of adversity [9, 10]. Political
economy framings depict illness as the result of poverty or maldistribution of power in
society (for example, Julian Tudor Hart’s Inverse Care Law states that people most in
need of health care are least likely to seek it or receive it) [11].
Complexity in Domain 1 may occur, for example, when the condition is
metabolically volatile (e.g. sepsis), inherently unstable (e.g. alcohol dependency), poorly
described or understood (e.g. a newly described syndrome), associated with multiple co-
morbidities and polypharmacy (for example, in older people) or influenced by socio-
economic or cultural factors (including poverty and material circumstances; limited
access to healthcare; low health literacy, system literacy or digital literacy; cultural
traditions and norms; social exclusion). For an overview of the kinds of complexity that
affect the condition or illness, see this review [12].
Domain 2 is the technology, for which a number of underpinning theories covered in
separate chapters elsewhere in this text book may be relevant, including socio-technical
systems theories2, technology adoption theories3, normalisation process theory4 and
user-centred design theories5. In our own empirical work applying NASSS to patient-
facing technologies (e.g. designed to support self-care in the home), we have drawn
particularly on Jeanette Pols’ theory interpretation of actor-network theory, which
2 See Chapter 7, “Distributed Cognition: understanding complex sociotechnical informatics” and Chapter
8, “Using Actor-Network Theory to study health information technology interventions”.
3 See Chapter 6, “Technology Acceptance Models in health informatics: TAM and UTAUT”.
4 See Chapter 15, “Implementing and embedding health informatics systems – understanding
organisational behaviour change using Normalization Process Theory (NPT)”.
5 See Chapter 5, “Linking Activity Theory with User Centred Design: a human computer interaction
framework for the design and evaluation of mHealth interventions”.
T.GreenhalghandS.Abimbola
/TheNASSSFramework–ASynthesisofMultipleTheories196
zurĂĽck zum
Buch Applied Interdisciplinary Theory in Health Informatics - Knowledge Base for Practitioners"
Applied Interdisciplinary Theory in Health Informatics
Knowledge Base for Practitioners
- Titel
- Applied Interdisciplinary Theory in Health Informatics
- Untertitel
- Knowledge Base for Practitioners
- Autoren
- Philip Scott
- Nicolette de Keizer
- Andrew Georgiou
- Verlag
- IOS Press BV
- Ort
- Amsterdam
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-1-61499-991-1
- Abmessungen
- 16.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 242
- Kategorie
- Informatik