​​Doing Health in the Clinical Research Centre:​ Care Work in Choreographies of Data Production

Health examinations are an essential part of cohort studies: questionnaires are filled in, biological samples drawn, bodies weighed and measured, their capacities and functions tested. Drawing on an ethnography of these clinical encounters, in the context of a population-based environmental health c...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Medicine Anthropology Theory
Main Author: Nolwenn Buhler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh 2025-03-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.medanthrotheory.org/mat/article/view/9131
Description
Summary:Health examinations are an essential part of cohort studies: questionnaires are filled in, biological samples drawn, bodies weighed and measured, their capacities and functions tested. Drawing on an ethnography of these clinical encounters, in the context of a population-based environmental health cohort in Switzerland, I describe the choreography of data production and how it blurs the boundary between healthcare and scientific research. In contrast to the notion of clinical labour, which describes logics of objectification and extraction, this Field Note paints a more nuanced and sensitive picture, in which care work performed by nurses, the active role played by participants, and the materialities around them, come together and move apart. These fragile choreographies point to the importance of care work as a form of expertise necessary for data production.
ISSN:2405-691X