6533b7d8fe1ef96bd126ad51

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Social Robots and Human Touch in Care : The Perceived Usefulness of Robot Assistance Among Healthcare Professionals

Tuuli TurjaLina Van AerschotJaana Parviainen

subject

ikääntyvätmedicine.medical_specialtyActivities of daily livingEmerging technologiesApplied psychologySocial robotsCareElderly peopleHuman–robot interactionSosiaali- ja yhteiskuntapolitiikka - Social policyFilosofia - PhilosophyHealthcare professionalsmedicinehoivakosketusSocial robotNursing ethicsRobot assistancePsykologia - PsychologyrobottitukiHuman touchEmbodied cognitionSurvey data collectionCare worksosiaaliset robotitterveydenhuollon ammattilaisetPsychology

description

Touching in care work is inevitable, particularly in cases where clients depend on nurses for many activities of daily living, such as bathing, dressing, lifting and assisting. When new technologies are involved in nurse–client relationships, the significance of human touch needs special attention. Stressing the importance of practitioners’ opinions on the usage of robots in care environments, we analyze care workers’ attitudes toward robot assistance in the care of older people and reflect on their ideas of the embodied relationship that caregivers and care receivers have with technology. To examine nurses’ attitudes toward care robots, we use survey data on professional care workers (n = 3800), including random samples of registered and practical nurses working primarily in elderly care. As the theoretical framework for analyzing the empirical data, we apply two different conceptual approaches regarding human touch: nursing ethics and the phenomenological theory of embodiment. The empirical results suggest that the care workers are significantly more approving of robot assistance for lifting heavy materials compared to the moving patients. Generally, the care workers have reservations about the idea of utilizing autonomous robots in tasks that typically involve human touch, such as assisting the elderly in the bathroom.

https://trepo.tuni.fi/handle/10024/119847