Edited by Elizabeth Harlow and Stephen A Webb.
Jessica Kingsley Publishers
ISBN 1843100495
£17.95
STAR RATING: 2/5
Sadly, the curate's egg springs to mind over these essays which look at how new technologies are, for good or ill, changing both health and social care, writes John Carr.
Some of the chapters are written in a lucid and accessible style, so the book ought to appeal to a wide cross-section of readers. The introduction, for example, gives a highly readable overview of the history of the development of technologies across a range of welfare services.
However, one then turns to the chapter with the interesting title of "Health collaborative learning and the collapse of professionalism: The information brothel" which through a "hermeneutic approach" considers "health informatics as historically unique socio-technical and 'techno-economic paradigms'." Definitely not for the uninitiated.
John Carr is associate director, children and technology department, NCH.
Career clinic: coping with interview nerves
23 July 2008
Cafcass sets out to improve handling of private law cases
23 July 2008
Hackney, Hammersmith & Fulham: social workers gain management skills and salary
23 July 2008
Healthcare Commission highlights mental health care failings
23 July 2008
Jersey: Simon Bellwood 'unfairly sacked' inquiry finds
Councils failing to implement government guidance issued in 2002, study says
Lone parents, disabled and drug users face tougher benefits regime
Children's homes and disabled people's services exempt from strike
Government Legislation
17 July 2008
Private Member Bills
17 July 2008
Details of government consultations
11 July 2008