The Rise and Fall of a Boundary Object: How Medical Prescriptions Became a Boundary Object and Why They May Lose this Role through Digitalization
Reimers, Kai; Schellhammer, Stefan; Borchers, Marie; Stowasser, Kerstin; Linzbach, Christina
Zusammenfassung
We extend and evaluate a model of the life cycle of
boundary objects proposed by Susan Star (2010) by ap-
plying it to the evolution of medical prescriptions as
boundary objects between pharmacists and physicians
during the 19th and 20th century. We find that interpre-
tative flexibility, an essential characteristic of boundary
objects, is not a property of an object, but results from
a certain constellation of practices connected by it. This
resonates with Star’s claims that ‘boundary object’ and
‘work arrangement’ are equivalent terms. Based on our
findings, we speculate that digitalization of medical pre-
scriptions may significantly reduce their character as
boundary objects and turn them into a fully specified in-
terface of an inter-organizational information system.
We also briefly discuss the conditions under which med-
ication plans may become new boundary objects in the
relationship between physicians and pharmacists
Schlüsselwörter
Boundary object; evolution; medical prescriptions; historical analysis; interpretative flexibility