2021
DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.13258
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Challenging ‘colour time’: A practice and narrative approach to organising waiting time in hospitals

Abstract: Waiting time in hospitals is often studied from one of two perspectives: a distributed resource in hospitals or a potential steering and measuring factor. In this article, waiting time in an emergency department is examined from a practice and a narrative perspective, placing time at the core of our analysis. Our article explores patient waiting time as a local practice that builds on the temporal structuring that affects how waiting time is regulated by both normal clock time and event time—as interpretative … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Within these contributions is a critique of normative understandings of bodily rhythms and what may be considered a ‘biological’ or body clock (Adam, 2004 ) through an acknowledgement of social, relational, material and temporal contexts in which they are situated. Temporalities within medicalised encounters have also been highlighted, such as accounts of waiting (Pedersen et al., 2021 ). Similarly, care is another example in which temporalities are illuminated, described as ‘process time’ where care takes ‘as long as it takes’ (Davies, 1994 ).…”
Section: Temporalities In Medical Sociologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Within these contributions is a critique of normative understandings of bodily rhythms and what may be considered a ‘biological’ or body clock (Adam, 2004 ) through an acknowledgement of social, relational, material and temporal contexts in which they are situated. Temporalities within medicalised encounters have also been highlighted, such as accounts of waiting (Pedersen et al., 2021 ). Similarly, care is another example in which temporalities are illuminated, described as ‘process time’ where care takes ‘as long as it takes’ (Davies, 1994 ).…”
Section: Temporalities In Medical Sociologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sociology of health and illness has long recognised time as a significant element of the workings of biomedical practice (e.g. Armstrong, 1985; Frankenberg, 1992; Pedersen et al., 2021; Williams et al., 2021; Zerubavel, 1979). Work within the sociology of reproduction has illustrated the gains to be made by critically interrogating how normative temporalities are interwoven with understandings and experiences of reproduction (e.g.…”
Section: Introduction: Timing Labour and Birthmentioning
confidence: 99%