Negotiating a healthy body in old age: preventive home visits and biopolitics
The study discussed in this article sheds light on how a specific publichealth policy, the preventive home visit (PHV) aimed at senior citizens, is implemented at the local level in Denmark. Empirically the article calls attention to what is actually going on in a preventive practice, based on part...
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2013-10-01
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doaj-276f5a5955a54487beaa0e5dbd3f10772020-11-25T01:40:10ZengLinköping University Electronic PressInternational Journal of Ageing and Later Life1652-86702013-10-018110.3384/ijal.1652-8670.138111Negotiating a healthy body in old age: preventive home visits and biopoliticsLene Otto0 Department of Ethnology and Center for Healthy Ageing, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark The study discussed in this article sheds light on how a specific publichealth policy, the preventive home visit (PHV) aimed at senior citizens, is implemented at the local level in Denmark. Empirically the article calls attention to what is actually going on in a preventive practice, based on participant observations, interviews and ten years#&8217; worth of visitation records. Theoretically, the article applies a Foucauldian biopolitical approach that understands the visits as an implementation of the active ageing scheme, as the notion of prevention is practised as a continuous process, which is utilised to train people#&8217;s gazes and sensitivity, and teach them to recognise ‘activity’ as closely linked to future well-being and longevity. An important finding is that the intervention is not normalising in a deterministic way but rather negotiable. Even though the home visitors represent a health regimen where activity is interpreted as bodily exercise, they try to avoid the tendency to prescribe for older people. Rather than prevention in the strict sense, it seems to be a health promotion strategy that encourages older people to articulate their needs. The meeting between the health visitor and the older person is characterised by conversations and negotiations about health, autonomy and bodily experiences. https://journal.ep.liu.se/IJAL/article/view/1241preventive home visitsFoucauldian gerontologyactive ageinghealth promotionbiopoliticshealth advisors |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Lene Otto |
spellingShingle |
Lene Otto Negotiating a healthy body in old age: preventive home visits and biopolitics International Journal of Ageing and Later Life preventive home visits Foucauldian gerontology active ageing health promotion biopolitics health advisors |
author_facet |
Lene Otto |
author_sort |
Lene Otto |
title |
Negotiating a healthy body in old age: preventive home visits and biopolitics |
title_short |
Negotiating a healthy body in old age: preventive home visits and biopolitics |
title_full |
Negotiating a healthy body in old age: preventive home visits and biopolitics |
title_fullStr |
Negotiating a healthy body in old age: preventive home visits and biopolitics |
title_full_unstemmed |
Negotiating a healthy body in old age: preventive home visits and biopolitics |
title_sort |
negotiating a healthy body in old age: preventive home visits and biopolitics |
publisher |
Linköping University Electronic Press |
series |
International Journal of Ageing and Later Life |
issn |
1652-8670 |
publishDate |
2013-10-01 |
description |
The study discussed in this article sheds light on how a specific publichealth policy, the preventive home visit (PHV) aimed at senior citizens, is implemented at the local level in Denmark. Empirically the article calls attention to what is actually going on in a preventive practice, based on participant observations, interviews and ten years#&8217; worth of visitation records. Theoretically, the article applies a Foucauldian biopolitical approach that understands the visits as an implementation of the active ageing scheme, as the notion of prevention is practised as a continuous process, which is utilised to train people#&8217;s gazes and sensitivity, and teach them to recognise ‘activity’ as closely linked to future well-being and longevity. An important finding is that the intervention is not normalising in a deterministic way but rather negotiable. Even though the home visitors represent a health regimen where activity is interpreted as bodily exercise, they try to avoid the tendency to prescribe for older people. Rather than prevention in the strict sense, it seems to be a health promotion strategy that encourages older people to articulate their needs. The meeting between the health visitor and the older person is characterised by conversations and negotiations about health, autonomy and bodily experiences.
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topic |
preventive home visits Foucauldian gerontology active ageing health promotion biopolitics health advisors |
url |
https://journal.ep.liu.se/IJAL/article/view/1241 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT leneotto negotiatingahealthybodyinoldagepreventivehomevisitsandbiopolitics |
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