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Anna Lund Jepsen is an Associate Professor at the Department of Business & Management, SDU. She holds an MSc and a PhD in business economics and her research centers on project management with a special focus on stakeholder interaction and portfolio management.
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Anna Schneider-Kamp is an Associate Professor of Health and Consumption at the University of Southern Denmark in the Health domain of the Consumption, Culture and Commerce Group. She holds a PhD in Economics & Business Administration. Anna Schneider-Kamp's main research interest is to explore the double identity of patients as consumers and consumers as patients, both at sites of self-care and at the nexus of individual consumerism and professional healthcare. She aims to inform debates on consumer and patient involvement in healthcare, to nuance the cultural understanding and differentiation behind health consumption narratives, and to uncover new health-related roles and practices of consumers and patients. In her research, she studies and theorizes socio-cultural aspects of consumption and health through a critical interdisciplinary perspective that is rooted in medical sociology and consumer culture theory.
mHealth as a virtual bridge-builder between healthcare professionals and patients The Role of Social Media in Vaccine Skepticism Colorectal cancer screening: Patient Pathways (CoPPa) Optimization of continuity of care through targeted medical information |
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Dorthe Brogård Kristensen Contact: |
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Dorthe Brogård Kristensen is a professor specialized within the intersection of consumer culture, medical anthropology and STS (Science Technology and Society). She has led a number of research projects that focuses on empirical and theoretical understanding of the interface between human and technology. Her current interests include self-tracking technologies, algorithmic culture, health and consumption. She has been affiliated with the Consumption, Culture and Commerce research group at the Department of Business & Management at the University of Southern Denmark since 2008 and has been part of developing the program Market and Management Anthropology. Dorthe Brogård Kristensen has published in New Media and Society, Journal of Consumer Culture, Critical Health Communication, Sociology of Health and Illness and Journal of Marketing Management.
Multidisciplinary decision making processes in Danish cancer management Artificial Intelligence in breast cancer screening – a qualitative analysis
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Elena Shulzhenko Contact: |
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Elena Shulzhenko is an Associate Professor in the research group Management of People at the Department of Business & Management, SDU. In the healthcare context, she has conducted research on the resistance to a new digital technology in home care and the role of specialised competence profiles for doctors’ work motivation in a hospital. She is currently completing an article entitled “Varieties of medical professionalism: specialized competence profiles and work motivation in a hospital”. She is also preparing a new project on the impact of new digital technologies on healthcare workers’ motivation and wellbeing.
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Eva Riis is Associate Professor at the Centre for Integrative Innovation Management, Department of Management, SDU and Head of Studies for Master Project and Innovation Management. Eva Riis holds a master's degree in operations management. specializing in operations and management and PhD. He has a PhD in Business Administration and researches and teaches project studies with a special focus on innovation organised as projects, Governance of projects and project portfolio management.
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Henriette List Contact:
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Henriette List is a PhD Student at the Clinical Department and Department of Business & Management at University of Southern Denmark, the Department of Radiology at Odense University Hospital and at the management consultancy company Mobilize Strategy Consulting, where she also works as a management consultant. She participates in the project: Multidisciplinary decision making processes in Danish cancer management |
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Marianne Harbo Frederiksen Contact: |
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Marianne Harbo Frederiksen is an Associate Professor in technology and innovation management at the Centre for Integrative Innovation Management, Department of Business & Management at SDU. She is also the Head of Studies for SDU’s professional Master in Management of Technology. Moreover, she is a member of the Research Committee of and a Senior Researcher at the Centre for Innovative Medical Technology (CIMT), Department of Clinical Research, where she also (co-)supervises PhD and master’s thesis students. Assessment of the prerequisites and consequences of implementing digital pathology
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Perle Møhl Contact: |
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Perle Møhl, anthropologist (PhD, 2005) and documentary filmmaker. Her research and methods have focused on the implications of experiencing the world through visual and sensor(y) technologies, both as a filming anthropologist and in professional settings where technology mediates and orients decision-making. Her scientific focus areas are the anthropology of technology, visual & sensory anthropology, AI, surveillance & imaging technologies, green transition in shipping, as well as indigenous and rural identity politics. She participates in the project: Artificial Intelligence in breast cancer screening – a qualitative analysis
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Kathrine Rayce Contact: |
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Kathrine Rayce is a Postdoc at the Center for Innovative Medical Technology, OUH/SDU. Her research centers on how patients and their peers experience everyday life with (chronic) illness, what it means to them when technologies become a part of the daily living, and what practices evolve. The health professionals are also a part of this research: How do they experience working with technologies and how do the practices transform? With the theoretical frameworks and ethnographic fieldwork as a method, it is possible to generate knowledge on how technology becomes or does not become part of the daily living and professional practices of all involved, and how technology always transform prior practices. Kathrine Rayce’s latest research has been at Odense University Hospital, in a medical ward where over twenty digital technologies were developed or implemented over a period of three years (Digital Vision). Research in more than one technology at a time has not been done before. This project explores methods to generate knowledge on how the health professionals experience working with new digital technologies simultaneously and has found that workarounds are a part of adjusting and mediating the professional practices, if they have to be meaningful for all involved. An upcoming research project at OUH is Digital Vision II, where focus is directed at improving patient paths cross-sectionally with the help of digital technology. Here Kathrine Rayce will do research-based evaluation of the project over a two-year period. She participates in the project:
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Søren Askegaard Contact: |
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Søren Askegaard is professor of marketing at University of Southern Denmark in Odense, where he founded the research unit Consumption, Culture and Commerce. He has also served as Head of Studies and Head of Department. He has held visiting professorships in USA, Sweden, Finland and France. His research interests lie within the field of consumer culture theory with particular focus on the cultural logics in consumer society. Among other topics, he has contributed to research in the social imaginary of food and health and the consumer logics in the health care sector. He has served as associate editor at the Journal of Consumer Research (2008-2014) and is currently an editorial board member at three other international marketing journals. He is the co-founder of the European Doctoral School of Consumer Culture Theorizing as well as the founder of the BSc program in Market & Management Anthropology. Finally, he is currently the president of the international Consumer Culture Theory Consortium (2020-2023). He participates in the projects: The Role of Social Media in Vaccine Skepticism Colorectal cancer screening: Patient Pathways (CoPPa) |