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Photo of Lisa Guntram

Lisa Guntram

Associate Professor, Head of Unit

What I like the most about my work is the many experiences and life stories that I get to listen to and explore. The curiosity is endless!

Norms, sex, relations and ethics in medical practice

How can different actors’ experiences and attitudes shape the care of second degree perineal injuries? How may informal critique affect care encounters? As an interdisciplinarian grounded in medical humanities, these are questions I’m currently working on in my research.

Video

In my research, I study individuals’ stories about their body, their experiences of health care and their relations. Taking my vantage point in such stories and with theoretical tools from medical humanities, medical sociology and gender studies I examine how individuals make sense of their situation. The core in my work is my interest in understanding how assumptions and norms are enacted in medical practices and as such come to the same, but also how assumptions and norms at the same time are shaped in medical practices. By unpacking and problematising these dimensions of health care my research shows how different actors’ perspectives can come to matter in medical practices and ultimately improve care.

I’m currently working on these issues in two research projects. In the project ”The Many Meanings of Perineal Injuries” Lisa Lindén Gothenburg Uni and I explore care seekers’ and care providers’ experiences of and attitudes towards second-degree perineal injuries and how they shape and are shaped by, information, treatment, and care encounters. The project demonstrates how such attitudes and experiences can be unpacked and problematised to improve care. As such, it also furnishes discussions of the role of social sciences and humanities in the making of equal care. In the project “What are you complaining about?” led by my colleague Jelmer Brüggemann we analyse patients’ and care professionals’ experiences of and expectations on how critique is to be expressed; what they complain about; and how patients’ social position matters. The project aims to study what patients’ verbal critique means in Swedish care encounters, and how it can improve care quality and equity.

Communication and collaborations

In all of my projects, I try to find new ways of communicating my research to a wider audience. For example, I have worked with blogs, Wikipedia and in ongoing projects with short video productions. It provides new angles on my scientific production and contributes to widen my networks and develop contacts with different stakeholders. I have, for example, been hired as a lecturer by Svenska Turnerföreningen, Kvinnokliniken vid Linköpings universitetssjukhus, RFSL Linköping, Forskartorget Bokmässan, and Landstinget Örebro.

Communication and networking are also central tasks of my role as coordinator for the Centre for Medical Humanities and Bioethics. At CMHB, we want to gather, strengthen, and develop research, teaching, and collaboration with the society around us, within the areas of medical humanities and bioethics. We work on several levels: locally at LiU, and on regional, national and international scales.

Publications

2025

Lisa Guntram, Lisa Linden (2025) Social Science and Medicine, Vol. 382, Article 118381 (Article in journal)
Jelmer Brüggemann, Ann-Charlotte Nedlund, Lisa Guntram (2025) Social Science and Medicine, Vol. 376, Article 118112 (Article in journal)

2024

Jelmer Brüggemann, Lisa Guntram, Ann-Charlotte Nedlund, Sara-Lovise Ask Ewertson (2024)

News

People sit around a table.

Valuable insights after meeting with Smer

Current medical-ethical issues were in focus when the Swedish National Council on Medical Ethics (Smer), celebrating its 40th anniversary, visited ¸ŁŔűĽ§ (LiU).

New network with a focus on women's health

Researcher Lisa Guntram gets funding to launch a network dedicated to exploring and confronting the marginalisation of women's health. This will be the world's first research network on women's health with a focus on social sciences and humanities.

A pregnant belly is touched by a different person's hand

May I have your uterus?

Progress is being made in research into uterus transplantation. But to receive a transplanted uterus, it’s necessary to find a donor yourself, and recent research at LiU shows that this can create challenges.

Research project

Finished research projects

Organisation