212 research outputs found
Studying the emergence of a new social representation: Changes in thinking about nanotechnologies in early 21st-century Italy
We investigated the emergence of a new social representation (SR) of a techno\u2010scientific innovation\u2014nanotechnologies\u2014among the Italian public. We reviewed how nanotechnologies entered parliamentary debates and the media agenda in the early third millennium. We conducted cross\u2010sectional surveys in 2006 (N = 246) and 2011 (N = 486) to examine the emerging SR of nanotechnologies. We sought to observe processes of anchoring and objectification \u2018in action\u2019, by analyzing roles of (i) social groups, and (ii) neighboring SRs of science and of technology, over time. Several changes from 2006 to 2011 were identified: From a \u2018descriptive\u2019 to an \u2018evaluative\u2019 approach; from a \u2018neutral\u2019 to a \u2018controversial\u2019 issue; from a \u2018concrete\u2019 to an \u2018abstract\u2019 object; and from a \u2018technological\u2019 to a \u2018scientific\u2019 phenomenon. We conclude that nanotechnologies finally became \u2018relevant enough\u2019 by 2011 to be considered a proper object of SR, and an emerging SR can be observed
Tracking biomedicalization in the media: Public discourses on health and medicine in the UK and Italy, 1984–2017
This article examines historical trends in the reporting of health, illness and medicine in UK and Italian newspapers
from 1984 to 2017. It focuses on the increasing “biomedicalization” of health reporting and the framing
of health and medicine as a matter of technoscientific interventions. Methodologically, we relied on two large
datasets consisting of all the health- and medicine-related articles published in the online archives of The
Guardian (UK) and la Repubblica (Italy). These articles underwent a quantitative analysis, based on topic modelling
techniques, to identify and analyse relevant topics in the datasets. Moreover, we developed some synthetic
indices to support the analysis of how medical and health news are “biomedicalized” in media coverage.
Theoretically, we emphasise that media represent a constitutive environment in shaping biomedicalization
processes. Our analyses show that across the period under scrutiny, biomedicalization is a relevant, even if
sometimes ambivalent, frame in the media sphere, placing growing centrality on three dimensions: i) health and
well-being as a matter of individual commitment to self-monitoring and self-surveillance; ii) biomedicine as a
large technoscientific enterprise emerging from the entanglement between research fields and their technological
embodiments; iii) the multiverse reforms of welfare systems in facing the trade-off between universal
health coverage and the need to render the national healthcare system more sustainable and compatible with
non-expansionary monetary policies and austerity approaches in managing state government budgets
Supportive care for older people with dementia: socio-organisational implications
For many years, dementia care has been dominated by the standard medical approach, in which dementia is treated mainly with drugs, such as anti-anxiety, antidepressant and anti-psychotic medications. With the aim of seeking effective treatments for patients with dementia, over the last years, several contributions have criticized the pervasive use of drugs for the management of behavioural and physiological symptoms related to dementia, proposing personalised interventions aimed at supporting patients and their relatives from diagnosis until death. With particular reference to long-term settings, in this work, we aim at understanding the organisational implications of three types of interventions (labelled supportive care interventions – SCIs) that have characterised this shift in dementia care: person-centred, palliative and multi-disciplinary care. Conducted by following the integrative review method, our review ..
Citizen science and participatory science communication: an empirically informed discussion connecting research and theory
Citizen Science is believed to contribute significantly to the democratisation of science, engaging non-scientists in scientific research. Participatory approaches to science communication share the same interest through public participation and public engagement. In the attempt to connect these two debates both theoretically and empirically, we provide an analysis of the communication tools and strategies used by 157 Citizen Science projects across the EU, UK, and Switzerland. Our analysis reports that the CS projects surveyed tend to interpret communication as a disseminating activity, rather than as a tool to promote appropriate communication-based encounters with both project participants and other potential target audiences.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
What Works in the Field? Evaluating Informal Science Events
Around the world, increasing numbers of people are attending informal science events, often ones that are part of multi-event festivals that cross cultural boundaries. For the researchers who take part, and the organizers, evaluating the events’ success, value, and effectiveness is hugely important. However, the use of traditional evaluation methods such as paper surveys and formal structured interviews poses problems in informal, dynamic contexts. In this article, we draw on our experience of evaluating events that literally took place in a field, and discuss evaluation methods we have found to be simple yet useful in such situations
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