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Reducing uncertainty : Care users’ experiences of waiting when receiving video visits from digital home care

Scaramuzzino, Gabriella LU (2026) In Nordic Social Work Research
Abstract
Home care has been associated with time pressure and extensive waiting times, affecting care users’ ability to manage their daily activities. In 2023, one Swedish municipality started offering ‘video visits’ to complement home visits. However, little is known about the implications of this type of digital technology for care users’ waiting experiences. This article aims to understand how care users experience time in relation to home care and what implications video visits have for their experiences of time. This article is based on a qualitative interview study with 19 care users, aged 70 to 90+, who received video visits. Theoretical perspectives on uncertainty, temporal orders, and waiting have been used to analyse the empirical... (More)
Home care has been associated with time pressure and extensive waiting times, affecting care users’ ability to manage their daily activities. In 2023, one Swedish municipality started offering ‘video visits’ to complement home visits. However, little is known about the implications of this type of digital technology for care users’ waiting experiences. This article aims to understand how care users experience time in relation to home care and what implications video visits have for their experiences of time. This article is based on a qualitative interview study with 19 care users, aged 70 to 90+, who received video visits. Theoretical perspectives on uncertainty, temporal orders, and waiting have been used to analyse the empirical material. Results show how care users raised two concerns with the physical homecare: 1) care staff were seldom on time, and 2) there were too many new and different care staff. However, video visits were experienced to be punctual and offer staff continuity. Results show that video visits can reduce wait time in home care. However, it depends on how the digital technology is used, how the work is organized and performed, and how tasks are prioritized in relation to other tasks. The uncertainty that arises from waiting for home care negatively affects care users’ wellbeing, which is why it is important to find ways to make home care more predictable. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Home care has been associated with time pressure and extensive waiting times, affecting care users’ ability to manage their daily activities. In 2023, one Swedish municipality started offering ‘video visits’ to complement home visits. However, little is known about the implications of this type of digital technology for care users’ waiting experiences. This article aims to understand how care users experience time in relation to home care and what implications video visits have for their experiences of time. This article is based on a qualitative interview study with 19 care users, aged 70 to 90+, who received video visits. Theoretical perspectives on uncertainty, temporal orders, and waiting have been used to analyse the empirical... (More)
Home care has been associated with time pressure and extensive waiting times, affecting care users’ ability to manage their daily activities. In 2023, one Swedish municipality started offering ‘video visits’ to complement home visits. However, little is known about the implications of this type of digital technology for care users’ waiting experiences. This article aims to understand how care users experience time in relation to home care and what implications video visits have for their experiences of time. This article is based on a qualitative interview study with 19 care users, aged 70 to 90+, who received video visits. Theoretical perspectives on uncertainty, temporal orders, and waiting have been used to analyse the empirical material. Results show how care users raised two concerns with the physical homecare: 1) care staff were seldom on time, and 2) there were too many new and different care staff. However, video visits were experienced to be punctual and offer staff continuity. Results show that video visits can reduce wait time in home care. However, it depends on how the digital technology is used, how the work is organized and performed, and how tasks are prioritized in relation to other tasks. The uncertainty that arises from waiting for home care negatively affects care users’ wellbeing, which is why it is important to find ways to make home care more predictable. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
home care, older adults, welfare technology, tablets, waiting, hemvård, hemtjänst, videomöten, surfplatta, välfärdsteknik, väntan, time, tid
in
Nordic Social Work Research
publisher
UBM Exhibition Singapore PTE LTD
ISSN
2156-857X
DOI
10.1080/2156857X.2026.2623241
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
4fa38506-0f07-4081-86cf-dde142c607c2
date added to LUP
2026-01-28 08:00:34
date last changed
2026-01-30 10:34:57
@article{4fa38506-0f07-4081-86cf-dde142c607c2,
  abstract     = {{Home care has been associated with time pressure and extensive waiting times, affecting care users’ ability to manage their daily activities. In 2023, one Swedish municipality started offering ‘video visits’ to complement home visits. However, little is known about the implications of this type of digital technology for care users’ waiting experiences. This article aims to understand how care users experience time in relation to home care and what implications video visits have for their experiences of time. This article is based on a qualitative interview study with 19 care users, aged 70 to 90+, who received video visits. Theoretical perspectives on uncertainty, temporal orders, and waiting have been used to analyse the empirical material. Results show how care users raised two concerns with the physical homecare: 1) care staff were seldom on time, and 2) there were too many new and different care staff. However, video visits were experienced to be punctual and offer staff continuity. Results show that video visits can reduce wait time in home care. However, it depends on how the digital technology is used, how the work is organized and performed, and how tasks are prioritized in relation to other tasks. The uncertainty that arises from waiting for home care negatively affects care users’ wellbeing, which is why it is important to find ways to make home care more predictable.}},
  author       = {{Scaramuzzino, Gabriella}},
  issn         = {{2156-857X}},
  keywords     = {{home care; older adults; welfare technology; tablets; waiting; hemvård; hemtjänst; videomöten; surfplatta; välfärdsteknik; väntan; time; tid}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{01}},
  publisher    = {{UBM Exhibition Singapore PTE LTD}},
  series       = {{Nordic Social Work Research}},
  title        = {{Reducing uncertainty : Care users’ experiences of waiting when receiving video visits from digital home care}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2156857X.2026.2623241}},
  doi          = {{10.1080/2156857X.2026.2623241}},
  year         = {{2026}},
}