Publication | Closed Access
From iron gaze to nursing care: mental health nursing in the era of panopticism
72
Citations
8
References
2001
Year
Humanity And MedicineRemote Patient MonitoringMental HealthConnected HealthDigital HealthMedical HistoryJean WatsonTelehealthPsychiatryNursingPerformance StudiesAdvanced Practice NurseMental Health NursingIron GazeMechanical DevicesNursing ResearchMedicalizationMedicineDisciplinary Power
The purpose of this paper is to question the utilization of mechanical devices (cameras and microphones) to ensure the surveillance of hospitalized patients on psychiatric wards. The works of French philosopher, Michel Foucault, and those of nursing theorist, Jean Watson, are used to support this analysis. A growing number of Canadian psychiatric health care institutions are using mechanical devices for surveillance. The security of staff and patients as well as therapeutic purposes are stated as rationale for these practices. However, a Foucauldian perspective leads us to think otherwise. The metaphor of the panopticon is then used to uncover another reality: a disciplinary one. Within the scope of this paper, the question of surveillance, disciplinary power, caring philosophy, and mental health nursing will be examined.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1