Creating a place for population health: Interpreting the spaces of a new School in Auckland, New Zealand
Robin A. Kearns
Social Science & Medicine, 2007, vol. 65, issue 1, 125-137
Abstract:
Although the reconfiguring of health care within the hospital sector has gained considerable attention by social scientists, the tertiary education sector's response to new health philosophies and practices has proceeded largely unexamined. This paper considers the new School of Population Health at the University of Auckland, accounts for its origins and considers the synergies between its design and workplace organisation. The results of a thematic analysis of narratives offered by 24 employees collected in 2004 are then presented. Findings suggest that the amassing of academics from a range of health-related backgrounds is advancing interdisciplinary dialogue even if the nature and purpose of population health remains unclear to some. A key concern of respondents was the openness of the workplace which encourages a collaborative atmosphere but also generates distraction. The degree to which conduct within the new building is perceived as regulated was also of concern. Place clearly matters in the story of the new School: the form of the building (featuring an architecture of openness) complements its function (generating new collaborations and creative thinking about health). However, the question of how 'salutogenic' a setting it is remains contested.
Keywords: New; Zealand; Medical; education; Population; health; Place; Workplace; dynamics; Therapeutic; landscapes (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2007
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