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Resistant to treatment: AIDS, science, and power at the dawn of Uganda's 'treatment era'.

机译:耐治疗:乌干达“治疗时代”来临之初的艾滋病,科学和力量。

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摘要

Drug resistance, which occurs when HIV mutates to render AIDS medications (antiretrovirals) ineffective, has been a highly politicized topic within international health. Fears of "antiretroviral anarchy" leading to widespread drug resistance have been cited as a reason to exercise caution in extending access to HIV medication in poor countries, particularly those in sub-Saharan Africa. Nonetheless, the exact definition, causes and consequences of drug resistance remain topics of uncertainty and debate within HIV science. This is especially true in relation to drug resistance in Africa, where studies of drug resistance are just beginning as HIV drugs become more widely available. Using ethnographic research conducted among North American and Ugandan HIV researchers, my dissertation asks the questions: What do we know about drug resistance in Africa, and---more importantly--- how do we know it? This multi-sited project combines approaches from science and technology studies and critical medical anthropology to interrogate the political economy of transnational scientific research.;Resistant to Treatment examines the nexus of professional, economic, and ethical relations that is emerging between North American and Ugandan AIDS researchers in the context of multilateral efforts to provide widespread access to HIV drugs in sub-Saharan African countries. The immanent availability of these drugs has created research opportunities that are powerful both politically and professionally, and has resulted in an influx of research funding to Uganda via American researchers seeking to collaborate with Ugandan physicians. I describe how these partnerships are fueled by humanitarian and professional ambitions on both sides, and how researchers must negotiate these sometimes competing goals in the context of a donor/recipient relationship in which collaboration includes (but is not limited to) a strategic exchange of American research funding for access to Ugandan patients. I argue that commensurability becomes a key issue in these collaborations, as the profound incommensurability of the Ugandan and American HIV epidemics must be at least partially reconciled in order to render U.S. scientific and ethical protocols operable in Uganda. In addition, I explore how Ugandan AIDS experts negotiate their position as enablers of and participants in these emerging research opportunities.
机译:当HIV变异导致AIDS药物(抗逆转录病毒药物)无效时发生的耐药性已成为国际卫生中高度政治化的话题。人们对引起广泛耐药性的“抗逆转录病毒无政府状态”的恐惧被认为是在贫穷国家,特别是撒哈拉以南非洲那些国家扩大获得艾滋病毒药物治疗的谨慎态度的原因。但是,耐药性的确切定义,原因和后果仍然是HIV科学中不确定性和辩论性的话题。对于非洲的耐药性尤其如此,随着HIV药物的普及,对耐药性的研究才刚刚开始。通过对北美和乌干达的HIV研究人员进行的人种学研究,我的论文提出了以下问题:我们对非洲的耐药性了解多少,更重要的是,我们如何知道?这个多地点的项目结合了科学技术研究和批判医学人类学的方法,以质询跨国科学研究的政治经济学。研究人员在多边努力的背景下为撒哈拉以南非洲国家提供了广泛获得艾滋病毒药物的渠道。这些药物的无限供应创造了在政治上和专业上都强大的研究机会,并通过寻求与乌干达医生合作的美国研究人员将研究资金流入了乌干达。我描述了双方的人道主义和专业野心如何推动这些伙伴关系,以及研究人员如何在捐助者/接收者关系的背景下谈判这些有时相互竞争的目标,其中合作包括(但不限于)美国的战略交流为接触乌干达患者提供研究资金。我认为可比性成为这些合作中的关键问题,因为必须使乌干达和美国艾滋病毒流行病的严重不可比性至少部分得到调和,以使美国科学和道德规范在乌干达可操作。此外,我探讨了乌​​干达艾滋病专家如何谈判他们作为这些新兴研究机会的推动者和参与者的地位。

著录项

  • 作者

    Crane, Johanna.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, San Francisco.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, San Francisco.;
  • 学科 Anthropology Cultural.;Health Sciences Public Health.;Anthropology Medical and Forensic.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2007
  • 页码 252 p.
  • 总页数 252
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 人类学;预防医学、卫生学;
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:39:32

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