8 research outputs found

    THE TUBE : Formgiving discourse - not form follows norm. The medical ventilator and the neglected tube.

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    If form follows normative discourse in medical design, what happens to the gestalt when you include related discourses of the medical ventilator in the design process? My aim has been to integrate critical industrial design and with an exploratory aesthetic approach. This aesthetic approach aimed to create an on going exchange between the development of concepts inspired by theory and the creative sketching of 3-D form.The medical ventilator can be divided in three parts: 1. The technical part of the machine, 2. The monitor with an interface, and 3. The tubes that is the connection to the patient. In the beginning of the project I was working with the part of the medical ventilator that connects to the patient, ie. the tubes. My methods at this point were conducting interviews with caretakers, filming nurses handling the tube and having informal discussions with doctors and nurses. Using my own embodied experience is also part of my method since I am a licenced voctional nurse with experience from the ICU ward.I began my project by studiyng the part of the ventilator that connects to the patient. After I had been working with the project for some time I started to realise that what I was refering to as an important part of the medical ventilator, was just seen by others as a “tube”. I decided to change the roles, and to work only on the tube, and not on the rest of the apparatus. When I made this discourse shift, I tried to understand why the tube had been neglected in medical design. The tube is de facto an essential part of the ventilator. It is the important link between the patient and the apparatus, and without it, there is no treatment. Despite of this, the ventilator tube is not prioritised in medical design. I used gender theory about hierarchy of power and work division to understand this matter and concluded that the patient has low status in hospital care. Technical intensive care has high status, while patient related care as geriatric care has low status. In similar manner the hierarchy exists in the medical ventilator. The part of the product that contains the technology has high staus, while the part that is low tech and connected to the patient, the ventilator tube, has low status.My combined theoretical and explorative aesthetic approach didn’t only prove to change the gestalt, allowing for bodily form that challenges the constructed dichotomy of the hospital discourse. It also changed the entire focus on the product by making the tube central. It also inspired for a solution moving from a visual interface to a haptic and tactile interface. Some questions this design project attempts to discuss: What does it mean to give bodily form to this medical design project? How does the use of a tactility and haptics interface on a surface that may resemble a soft body help response from the staff and relatives as they encounter with the patient? In what way can the medical design process develop in a way to help patients regain humanit

    Abort n Go. : Med fullstÀndiga rÀttigheter

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    ABORT ‘n GO is a design project within the crossing boundaries of Critical Design and IndustrialDesign.The contemporary discourse on abortion is problematic, and infected by double norms. Thesenorms may cause feelings of guilt and shame in women who have an abortion. The abortion rightis built upon conflicting standpoints; one is that women have right to have an abortion, withoutbeing questioned. Second is the notion that abortion is something that should be avoided, implyingthat you’ve done something wrong if you have had an abortion.With this project and physical product I want to explore and discuss the contemporary discourseon abortion in Sweden. ABORT ‘n GO is a concept aimed as an optional abortion method for aspecific target group. It is not meant to replace other abortion methods, since women have differentneeds and preferences.With ABORT ‘n GO – the product design process commenced from a standpoint, subsequentlyresulting in questions rather than showing the optimal solution we usually expect in traditionalIndustrial Design

    Abort n Go. : Med fullstÀndiga rÀttigheter

    No full text
    ABORT ‘n GO is a design project within the crossing boundaries of Critical Design and IndustrialDesign.The contemporary discourse on abortion is problematic, and infected by double norms. Thesenorms may cause feelings of guilt and shame in women who have an abortion. The abortion rightis built upon conflicting standpoints; one is that women have right to have an abortion, withoutbeing questioned. Second is the notion that abortion is something that should be avoided, implyingthat you’ve done something wrong if you have had an abortion.With this project and physical product I want to explore and discuss the contemporary discourseon abortion in Sweden. ABORT ‘n GO is a concept aimed as an optional abortion method for aspecific target group. It is not meant to replace other abortion methods, since women have differentneeds and preferences.With ABORT ‘n GO – the product design process commenced from a standpoint, subsequentlyresulting in questions rather than showing the optimal solution we usually expect in traditionalIndustrial Design

    Fashion as inspirational source for the design of sustainable mobile interactions

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    In this position paper we discuss the various ways that fashion may inspire sustainable practices with interactive product design, exemplified by a design exploration around the concept of a wrinkled phone.QC 20220314</p

    Fashion as inspirational source for the design of sustainable mobile interactions

    No full text
    In this position paper we discuss the various ways that fashion may inspire sustainable practices with interactive product design, exemplified by a design exploration around the concept of a wrinkled phone.QC 20220314</p

    The Androchair : Performing Gynaecology through the Practice of Gender Critical Design

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    This paper highlights the important role that design plays when it comes to women’s overall experi- ences of ther gynaecological examination. It exempli es how the examination can become renegotiable through the practice of a critical design. We will re ect this in the design of the contemporary gynaecological examination chair (GEC). We used women’s experiences as a starting point for the design of an Androchair (a conceptual male equivalent of the GEC), in order to make the experiences critically visible. Inspired by the view of the gynaecolog- ical examination as a performance where the Androchair is represented as a prop and was placed on a stage as a discussion object during a public seminar. The Androchair allowed for both critical and multiple readings of the GEC and through that, the gynaecology examination at large. Moreover, it stimulated a discussion about alternative ideas towards achieving a more positive experience. QC 20170224</p

    Stad i vÄtt och torrt : Om inkluderande planering och gestaltning av miljöer med blÄgröna dagvattenlösningar ur ett breddat tillgÀnglighetsperspektiv

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    I rapporten presenteras lÀrdomar och resultat frÄn projektet TINK i syfte att inspirera kommuner, politiker ochkonsulter att arbeta utifrÄn ett breddat tillgÀnglighetsperspektiv och utveckla multifunktionella utomhusmiljöer dÀr bÄde dagvattenproblematik samt sociala mÄl och behov adresseras.Projektet har genomförts 2019-2021 under koordinering av RISE. TIN
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