A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

"Body Work" in Home-Based Substance Abuse Care




AuthorsGünther Kirsi

PublisherCogitatio

Publishing placeLissabon

Publication year2021

JournalSocial Inclusion

Volume9

Issue3

First page 256

Last page264

eISSN2183-2803

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.17645/si.v9i3.4310(external)

Web address www.cogitatiopress.com/socialinclusion/article/view/4310

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/66532759(external)


Abstract

This study examines “body work” in the context of home‐based substance abuse care in Finland, which is provided to adults with intoxicant problems and needing short‐ and long‐term support in their everyday lives. This article is concerned specifically with body work, which can be defined as care work focusing directly on the bodies of others. Through a twofold analysis of 13 audio‐recorded home visits and ethnographic field notes, it examines what body work is in home‐based substance abuse care, how close body work is and how workers and clients negotiate about it. The study shows that home as a site of care has an impact on substance abuse care. The worker’s home visit settles into a tension relation between private and public even if the care is a part of weekly routine. Body work is holistic care work necessitating slight, medium,
and extreme bodily intimacy in taking care of and supporting client’s well‐being. During the home visit, worker and client negotiate the body work and its content. Worker and client communicate verbally and non‐verbally by gaze and body movements. Often the workers have to balance between disciplinary, participatory, and caring approaches to support the client living in the best possible way.


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