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`You've got to take them seriously': meeting information needs in mental healthcareDepartment of Computing, InfoLab21, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4WA, UK
Department of Computing, InfoLab21, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4WA, UK, rooksby{at}comp.lancs.ac.uk
Department of Computing, InfoLab21, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4WA, UK, m.rouncefield{at}lancaster.ac.uk In this article we explore the practical aspects of providing mental health information over the telephone, and discuss how this may be used to inform the creation of a website. We draw from an ethnographic study of an `information and listening helpline'. By paying close attention to how the helpline operators `take seriously' their callers' problems and requests - indeed, by taking the work of the phone operators seriously - we show that the operators artfully talk, categorize and translate to help the individual caller and to satisfy organizational demands. A website is seen by the helpline in question as a logical move to providing accessible information to a wider audience. Whilst web-based and phone-based services might both appear to function along similar lines for providing information, we question how a web-based system might afford or complement the kinds of services that can be done over the telephone.
Key Words: information giving helpline mental healthcare
Health Informatics Journal, Vol. 13, No. 1,
37-45 (2007) |
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