23 August 2024

'The Social Life of Health Data': Health Records and Knowledge Production in Ghana

Research

Guest Researcher at CAS and Marie Curie fellow at the IT University Alena Thiel has published a new book examining 'The Social Life of Health Data'

The Social Life of Health Data Book Cover

  • The book illuminates the genealogies of oral, paper-based and digital forms of knowledge production about health

  • Spans case studies from Ghana’s colonial history to most recent efforts at introducing digital tools and innovations

  • Draws together interdisciplinary perspectives from medical anthropology, history, political sociology, and STS

'The Social Life of Health Data' takes the contemporary moment of digital health infrastructuring in Ghana as a starting point to examine the genealogies of oral, paper-based and digital forms of knowledge production about health. In view of this multiplicity of forms, the chapters adopt a broad definition of health data that encompasses databases, statistics as well as oral and written records and reports about health. In addition to close historiographic insights into the interactions of indigenous and colonial ways of organising knowledge around health, the chapters explore contemporary ways in which medical professionals are mobilized or potentially demobilized by the standards, methods and calculative devices that accompany the increasing production of health data. The authors show that the contemporary hype around the datafication of health is neither new nor exceptional, but instead needs to be read in broader historical perspective. Through its unique combination of historical, sociological and ethnographic methods, the book shows that the regulation and standardization of health produces both mobilizations and demobilizations, as well as appropriations and resistances.

You can access digital and physical versions of the book here

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