The ways in which mobile phones have transformed the boundaries of time and space and the possibilities of communication have profoundly affected our lives. However, there is little research on the use of mobiles in social care though evidence is emerging that mobile phones can play an important role in delivering services. This paper is based on a scoping review of the international literature in this area. A typology of mobile interventions is suggested. While most mobile phone interventions remain unidirectional and sit within traditional social care service provider-service user relationships, a minority are bi-or multidirectional and contain within them the potential to transform these traditional relationships by facilitating a collective development of social networks and social capital. Such transformations are accompanied by a range of issues and dilemmas that have made many service providers reluctant to engage with new technologies. We suggest that our typology is a useful model to draw on when researching the use of mobile phones in social care to support and empower isolated, marginalised and vulnerable service users.
K E Y W O R D Saccess to support, empowerment, health and social care, health and social care networks, technology
| INTRODUCTION: THE RISE OF MOBILE TECHNOLOGIESThe mobile phone is "arguably the most rapidly diffused technological artefact in history" (Wajcman, 2008, p. 68). The most recent data suggested that over 90% of adults in the UK had a mobile although only 66% had a "smartphone"-a phone powerful enough to act as an internet-enabled pocket computer (Ofcom, 2015). In some countries, including the UK, it has been suggested that there are rates of mobile phone ownership higher than 100% (Bittman, Brown, & Wajcman, 2009). Mobile phones have collapsed boundaries between work and leisure, and between our public and our private lives. Because mo- Despite the figures cited above, there is evidence of a digital divide in the UK: the most recent data suggest that mobile phone usage ranges from 90% of 16-to 24-year olds to just 18% of those aged 65 and over (Ofcom, 2015). Similarly, while 11% of all UK adults had never used the Internet, 24% of those aged 65-74 and 61% of those aged 75 and over had never used it. About 27% of disabled people (based on self-assessment against the Equality Actdefinition) also reported never using the Internet. These data suggest that a significant minority of the population may be excluded There is now a body of research on the potential for mobile phone technology to improve preventative care and illness management in health-related fields, but much less on the use of mobiles in social work and social care and very little on the perspectives of service users, how the service provider/service user relationship might be altered, or the practice implications for professional social workers and third sector volunteers.
| Background and research questionThe genesis of this paper was a study undertaken by a Social Work MA student, supervised by one of t...