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2.
Anthropol Med ; 29(2): 223-236, 2022 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34474626

RESUMO

Whilst quarantine has been experienced in a multitude of ways around the world, for some anthropologists the quietening of public movement was met with a flurry of attentive typing. For those who were consciously quarantined, a social science response to COVID-19 was sought at University College London through a call for posts as part of the UCL Medical Anthropology blog; capturing the real-time observations and scholarly reflections on the unfolding pandemic situation as it reached its height across the globe. The global flow of coronavirus - both as a literal microbial agent and as an idea - has played out on the 'coronascape' in multiple ways since it exploded onto worldwide consciousness in early 2020. From an anthropological perspective, concerns have oscillated around a number of crucial themes, from (micro)biopolitics, governance, and sovereignty; the defence of borders from foreign bodies and post-colonial Others; a strengthening of medical pluralism and the global biomedical hegemony, and concerns over where to go from here as second-waves and the social consequences of such loom large. Such themes have often interrelated and tangoed with one another as individuals have reflected upon their significance. In this review we provide a critical overview of the first fifty-seven posts that were sent to the blog in the initial months of the pandemic; with contributors exploring the developing pandemic in over twenty countries, and with posts visited daily by over two thousand visitors from across the world during the months of the UK lockdown (March-May).


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Antropologia Médica , Controle de Doenças Transmissíveis , Humanos , Quarentena , SARS-CoV-2
4.
Med Anthropol Q ; 35(4): 423-440, 2021 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35066927

RESUMO

Situated alongside and drawing from emerging inquiry, debate, and reflection about making and unmaking kin at a moment of critical reflection on racial, social, and reproductive inequities and changing environments, this special edition considers how anthropology can ethnographically examine and engage with intergenerational dynamics as they influence different scales and spheres of life. It brings together medical anthropologists and science and technology scholars conducting research in Bangladesh, China, the United Kingdom, South Africa, and the United States as they reflect on the un/making of kin in settings of expert knowledge production and dissemination, including practices of seed collecting, epigenetic science, birth cohort studies, social policy generation, and clinical trials. Contributors to this special issue consider how intergenerational relations and modes of transmission take form in and through biosocial research-both as an object of study and a method of analysis. [intergenerational, environmental change, kinship, biosocial].


Assuntos
Antropologia Cultural , Relação entre Gerações , Antropologia Médica , China , Humanos , Reino Unido , Estados Unidos
5.
Anthropol Med ; 27(4): 449-464, 2020 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32009452

RESUMO

In this era of personalisation a patient's molecular profile plays an increasingly central role in development and delivery of personalised medicine. This paper sets out to explore the sociocultural implications of mainstreaming BRCA genetic testing in the treatment of advanced ovarian cancer patients, who carry a BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene mutation. It draws on ethnographic research conducted by between April-June 2016 in a large tertiary London hospital. Participant observation was conducted across two sites. For the first two weeks participant observation was conducted in the traditional genetic testing setting in two separate clinics. From thereon, participant observation was conducted in the clinical encounters of treating patients in the ovarian cancer clinic. In addition, face-to-face interviews were conducted with medical oncologists who worked in the clinic. Contributing to the fields of cancer genetics, personalised medicine and medical material culture studies in medical anthropology the paper seeks to further discussions about the interactions and relationships unfolding between medical objects and subjects across the landscape of cancer care. It highlights the importance of clinic-based ethnography to examine the complexities of identities and technologies as they intersect with the themes of suffering and hope in new and contradictory ways for BRCA-positive patients with late-stage disease. The paper argues that a BRCA mutation is not only central to the political economy of hope but takes on a more materialist nature as it becomes an embodied practice that moves in and beyond the clinic.


Assuntos
Proteína BRCA1/genética , Proteína BRCA2/genética , Neoplasias Ovarianas , Medicina de Precisão/psicologia , Antropologia Médica , Feminino , Humanos , Mutação/genética , Oncologistas/psicologia , Neoplasias Ovarianas/etnologia , Neoplasias Ovarianas/genética , Neoplasias Ovarianas/psicologia , Neoplasias Ovarianas/terapia
6.
Cien Saude Colet ; 24(10): 3637-3650, 2019.
Artigo em Português, Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31576994

RESUMO

Rare genetic diseases are an important public health problem, but they are still little studied in Collective Health. This article aims to analyze the 'therapeutic itineraries' of patients in search of a diagnosis and treatment for rare genetic diseases in the cities of Rio de Janeiro, Salvador and Porto Alegre. It focuses on the material challenges, emotional and structural problems faced in these trajectories. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with patients/caregivers and health professionals in the context of public health medical genetics. Our findings suggest that the experience of the rare genetic disease is aggravated by practical, inter-relational and bureaucratic/institutional problems. The reality of long and circuitous journeys to obtain a diagnosis, non-geneticists' lack of knowledge about rare diseases, difficulties in transportation and access to specialists, diagnostic and complementary examinations, and access to high-cost medicines and food supplies were common challenges in all the narratives examined in the three Brazilian cities. In addition, adherence to care provided by medical genetics requires action and strategies that depend on arrangements involving family members, physicians, patient associations, and the state.


As doenças genéticas raras constituem um importante problema de saúde pública, mas ainda são pouco estudadas na perspectiva da Saúde Coletiva. Este artigo tem por objetivo analisar os itinerários terapêuticos de pacientes com doenças genéticas raras nas cidades do Rio de Janeiro, Salvador e Porto Alegre, tendo por foco os desafios materiais, emocionais e estruturais enfrentados na busca por diagnóstico e tratamento. Foram realizadas entrevistas semiestruturadas com pacientes/cuidadores e profissionais de saúde em serviços públicos de genética médica. Observou-se que a experiência da doença genética rara, além de ser um desafio em si pelo caráter debilitante e incapacitante, é agravada por problemas de ordem prático-relacionais e burocrático-institucionais que não se resolvem com a chegada a um serviço especializado. A existência de longos itinerários terapêuticos até o diagnóstico, o desconhecimento dos médicos não geneticistas sobre as doenças raras, as dificuldades de transporte e de acesso a especialistas, a exames diagnósticos e complementares e o acesso a medicamentos e insumos alimentares de alto custo foram comuns às narrativas nas três cidades. A adesão aos cuidados oferecidos exigem estratégias de ação que dependem de arranjos envolvendo familiares, médicos, associações de pacientes e o Estado.


Assuntos
Doenças Genéticas Inatas/diagnóstico , Saúde Pública , Doenças Raras/diagnóstico , Brasil , Cuidadores/estatística & dados numéricos , Cidades , Doenças Genéticas Inatas/terapia , Pessoal de Saúde/estatística & dados numéricos , Acessibilidade aos Serviços de Saúde , Humanos , Entrevistas como Assunto , Cooperação do Paciente , Doenças Raras/genética , Doenças Raras/terapia
7.
Ciênc. Saúde Colet. (Impr.) ; 24(10): 3637-3650, Oct. 2019. tab
Artigo em Português | LILACS | ID: biblio-1039467

RESUMO

Resumo As doenças genéticas raras constituem um importante problema de saúde pública, mas ainda são pouco estudadas na perspectiva da Saúde Coletiva. Este artigo tem por objetivo analisar os itinerários terapêuticos de pacientes com doenças genéticas raras nas cidades do Rio de Janeiro, Salvador e Porto Alegre, tendo por foco os desafios materiais, emocionais e estruturais enfrentados na busca por diagnóstico e tratamento. Foram realizadas entrevistas semiestruturadas com pacientes/cuidadores e profissionais de saúde em serviços públicos de genética médica. Observou-se que a experiência da doença genética rara, além de ser um desafio em si pelo caráter debilitante e incapacitante, é agravada por problemas de ordem prático-relacionais e burocrático-institucionais que não se resolvem com a chegada a um serviço especializado. A existência de longos itinerários terapêuticos até o diagnóstico, o desconhecimento dos médicos não geneticistas sobre as doenças raras, as dificuldades de transporte e de acesso a especialistas, a exames diagnósticos e complementares e o acesso a medicamentos e insumos alimentares de alto custo foram comuns às narrativas nas três cidades. A adesão aos cuidados oferecidos exigem estratégias de ação que dependem de arranjos envolvendo familiares, médicos, associações de pacientes e o Estado.


Abstract Rare genetic diseases are an important public health problem, but they are still little studied in Collective Health. This article aims to analyze the 'therapeutic itineraries' of patients in search of a diagnosis and treatment for rare genetic diseases in the cities of Rio de Janeiro, Salvador and Porto Alegre. It focuses on the material challenges, emotional and structural problems faced in these trajectories. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with patients/caregivers and health professionals in the context of public health medical genetics. Our findings suggest that the experience of the rare genetic disease is aggravated by practical, inter-relational and bureaucratic/institutional problems. The reality of long and circuitous journeys to obtain a diagnosis, non-geneticists' lack of knowledge about rare diseases, difficulties in transportation and access to specialists, diagnostic and complementary examinations, and access to high-cost medicines and food supplies were common challenges in all the narratives examined in the three Brazilian cities. In addition, adherence to care provided by medical genetics requires action and strategies that depend on arrangements involving family members, physicians, patient associations, and the state.


Assuntos
Humanos , Saúde Pública , Doenças Raras/diagnóstico , Doenças Genéticas Inatas/diagnóstico , Brasil , Entrevistas como Assunto , Cooperação do Paciente , Cidades , Cuidadores/estatística & dados numéricos , Pessoal de Saúde/estatística & dados numéricos , Doenças Raras/genética , Doenças Raras/terapia , Acessibilidade aos Serviços de Saúde , Doenças Genéticas Inatas/terapia
8.
Anthropol Med ; 25(1): 11-29, 2018 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29533091

RESUMO

Within the context of a globalising agenda for genetic research where 'global health' is increasingly seen as necessarily informed by and having to account for genomics, the focus on rare genetic diseases is becoming prominent. Drawing from ethnographic research carried out separately by both authors in Brazil, this paper examines how an emerging focus on two different arenas of rare genetic disease, cancer genetics and a class of degenerative neurological diseases known as Ataxias, is subject to and a product of the dynamics of inclusion and exclusion as this concerns participation in research and access to health care. It examines how in these different cases 'rarenesss' has been diversely situated and differently politicised and how clinicians, patients and their families grapple with the slippery boundaries between research, rights to health and the limits of care, therapy or prevention. It illustrates how attention to rare genetic disease in Brazil emerges at the intersection of a particular history of genetic research and public health infrastructure, densely complicated feedback loops between clinical care and research, patient mobilisation around the 'judicialisation' of health and recent state legislation regarding rare disease in Brazil. It highlights the relevance of local configurations in the way rare genetic disease is being made relevant for and by different communities.


Assuntos
Doenças Genéticas Inatas , Genômica , Doenças Raras , Adulto , Antropologia Médica , Brasil/etnologia , Criança , Feminino , Doenças Genéticas Inatas/etnologia , Doenças Genéticas Inatas/genética , Doenças Genéticas Inatas/terapia , Humanos , Lactente , Internacionalidade , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Doenças Raras/etnologia , Doenças Raras/genética , Doenças Raras/terapia
10.
11.
Biosocieties ; 13(4): 761-779, 2018 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30976288

RESUMO

Drawing on empirical ethnographic research in Brazil this paper examines how in the spaces between identifying genetic markers and conditional cancer risk, environments and diverse epigenetic logics are emerging and being negotiated among research and clinical communities, patients and their families. Focusing on an arena of research and medical intervention related to a gene variant known as R337h, thought to occur with high frequency in the south of Brazil and linked to the cancer syndrome Li-Fraumeni, it emphasises the relevance of examining epigenetics as an emic category but also its utility as an analytic category. It shows how in a context of not yet fully knowing how and in what ways R337h contributes to increased cancer, a range of different 'environments' are invoked that unevenly articulate an emerging and still inchoate and unfolding terrain of understanding. In an arena of expanding genomic research and medicine, where the identification of low risk mutations associated with cancer is increasingly common, the Brazilian case provides a particular lens on the way environments and genes are being meaningfully calibrated and how differently implicated communities resourcefully populate the gaps in knowledge and understanding with consequences for research, care and embodied risk.

12.
Anthropol Med ; 24(2): 174-188, 2017 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28721744

RESUMO

Engaging recent social science work examining the truth making claims of science and biomedicine, this paper explores how biology is being localised in Brazilian cancer genetics. It draws from ethnographic fieldwork in urban regions of southern Brazil working with and alongside patients, families and practitioners in cancer genetic clinics. It examines how different sorts of 'local biologies' are articulated in the context of research, clinical practice and among implicated patient communities and the way these can 'recursively' move across different spheres and scales of social action to extend and transform the meaning of the biological. It shows how the mattering of the biological in Brazilian cancer genetics is fundamentally informed by questions of inequity and care, even while multiple local biologies may obscure rather than reveal the biopolitics of cancer. In an era of epigenetics this raises new opportunities and challenges for anthropological analysis as intervention.


Assuntos
Genômica , Neoplasias/etnologia , Neoplasias/genética , Adulto , Antropologia Médica , Brasil/etnologia , Feminino , Disparidades em Assistência à Saúde/etnologia , Humanos , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Risco
13.
Hist Cienc Saude Manguinhos ; 23(1): 95-112, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27008076

RESUMO

This article examines how cancer genetics has emerged as a focus for research and healthcare in Cuba and Brazil. Drawing on ethnographic research undertaken in community genetics clinics and cancer genetics services, the article examines how the knowledge and technologies associated with this novel area of healthcare are translated and put to work by researchers, health professionals, patients and their families in these two contexts. It illuminates the comparative similarities and differences in how cancer genetics is emerging in relation to transnational research priorities, the history and contemporary politics of public health and embodied vulnerability to cancer that reconfigures the scope and meaning of genomics as "personalised" medicine.


Assuntos
Genômica , Medicalização , Neoplasias/genética , Medicina de Precisão , Pesquisa Biomédica , Brasil , Cuba , Dieta/efeitos adversos , Humanos , Neoplasias/etiologia , Medicina de Precisão/tendências , Saúde Pública
14.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 23(1): 95-112, enero-mar. 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | LILACS, Inca | ID: lil-777306

RESUMO

Abstract This article examines how cancer genetics has emerged as a focus for research and healthcare in Cuba and Brazil. Drawing on ethnographic research undertaken in community genetics clinics and cancer genetics services, the article examines how the knowledge and technologies associated with this novel area of healthcare are translated and put to work by researchers, health professionals, patients and their families in these two contexts. It illuminates the comparative similarities and differences in how cancer genetics is emerging in relation to transnational research priorities, the history and contemporary politics of public health and embodied vulnerability to cancer that reconfigures the scope and meaning of genomics as “personalised” medicine.


Resumo O artigo mostra como a genética do câncer, em Cuba e no Brasil, tornou-se matéria de pesquisa, despertando maior interesse da saúde pública. Foram usadas pesquisas etnográficas realizadas em clínicas de genética comunitária e serviços de genética do câncer para averiguar como o conhecimento e as tecnologias associadas à nova área da saúde são convertidos e empregados por pesquisadores, profissionais da saúde, pacientes e familiares nesses dois contextos. Destaca, comparativamente, as semelhanças e diferenças na maneira pela qual a genética do câncer se posiciona em relação às prioridades em pesquisas transnacionais, na história e na política contemporânea da saúde pública e a vulnerabilidade incorporada ao câncer que reconfigura o escopo e o significado da genômica como a medicina “personalizada”.


Assuntos
Humanos , Genômica , Medicina de Precisão , Medicalização , Neoplasias , Brasil , Saúde Pública , Cuba , Pesquisa Biomédica , Dieta/efeitos adversos , Medicina de Precisão/tendências , Neoplasias/etnologia
15.
Med Anthropol ; 35(1): 58-72, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26452039

RESUMO

In the past ten years, there has been an expansion of scientific interest in population genetics linked to both understanding histories of human migration and the way that population difference and diversity may account for and/or be implicated in health and disease. In this article, I examine how particular aspects of a globalizing research agenda related to population differences and genetic ancestry are taken up in locally variant ways in the nascent field of Brazilian cancer genetics. Drawing on a broad range of ethnographic data from clinical and nonclinical contexts in the south of Brazil, I examine the ambiguities that attention to genetic ancestry generates, so revealing the disjunctured and diverse ways a global research agenda increasingly orientated to questions of population difference and genetic ancestry is being used and reused.


Assuntos
Predisposição Genética para Doença/genética , Neoplasias/genética , Antropologia Médica , Brasil/etnologia , Etnicidade/genética , Feminino , Genética Populacional , Humanos , Masculino , Grupos Raciais/genética
16.
Hist. ciênc. saúde-Manguinhos ; 23(1): 95-111, jan.-mar. 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | HISA (história da saúde) | ID: his-36632

RESUMO

O artigo mostra como a genética do câncer, em Cuba e no Brasil, tornou-se matéria de pesquisa, despertando maior interesse da saúde pública. Foram usadas pesquisas etnográficas realizadas em clínicas de genética comunitária e serviços de genética do câncer para averiguar como o conhecimento e as tecnologias associadas à nova área da saúde são convertidos e empregados por pesquisadores, profissionais da saúde, pacientes e familiares nesses dois contextos. Destaca, comparativamente, as semelhanças e diferenças na maneira pela qual a genética do câncer se posiciona em relação às prioridades em pesquisas transnacionais, na história e na política contemporânea da saúde pública e a vulnerabilidade incorporada ao câncer que reconfigura o escopo e o significado da genômica como a medicina “personalizada”. (AU)


Assuntos
Medicina Social , Doenças Genéticas Inatas , Neoplasias
17.
Vibrant (Brasilia) ; 12(1): 67-74, 2015 Jun 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26346060
18.
Biosocieties ; 10(1): 48-69, 2015 Mar 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26290677

RESUMO

Public funding for research on the action of drugs in countries like the United States requires that racial classification of research subjects should be considered when defining the composition of the samples as well as in data analysis, sometimes resulting in interpretations that Whites and Blacks differ in their pharmacogenetic profiles. In Brazil, pharmacogenomic results have led to very different interpretations when compared with those obtained in the United States. This is explained as deriving from the genomic heterogeneity of the Brazilian population. This article argues that in the evolving field of pharmacogenomics research in Brazil there is simultaneously both an incorporation and rejection of the US informed race-genes paradigm. We suggest that this must be understood in relation to continuities with national and transnational history of genetic research in Brazil, a differently situated politics of Brazilian public health and the ongoing valorization of miscegenation or race mixture by Brazilian geneticists as a resource for transnational genetic research. Our data derive from anthropological investigation conducted in INCA (Brazilian National Cancer Institute), in Rio de Janeiro, with a focus on the drug warfarin. The criticism of Brazilian scientists regarding the uses of racial categorization includes a revision of mathematical algorithms for drug dosage widely used in clinical procedures around the world. Our analysis reveals how the incorporation of ideas of racial purity and admixture, as it relates to the efficacy of drugs, touches on issues related to the possibility of application of pharmaceutical technologies on a global scale.

19.
J Community Genet ; 6(3): 185-7, 2015 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26054699
20.
J Community Genet ; 6(3): 287-93, 2015 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25998783

RESUMO

Drawing from perspectives of both bioethics and anthropology, this article explores how the boundaries between personal and relational privacy are negotiated by patients and practitioners in the context of an emerging domain of cancer genetics in Brazil. It reflects on the place of informed consent in the history of bioethics in North America in contrast to the development of bioethics in Brazil and the particular social cultural context in which consent is sought in Brazilian public health care. Making use of empirical research with families and individuals receiving genetic counselling related to increased genetic risk for cancer, in genetic clinics in southern Brazil, it examines how informed consent is linked to the necessary movement between personal and relational privacy. The paper illustrates the value of a particular tool known as a 'sociogram' to examine the complex interpersonal dynamics that arise in negotiating informed consent at the interface between the family and the individual in Brazil. The paper, therefore, points to the scope of further interdisciplinary exchanges between anthropology and bioethics, confronting the new challenges that arise in the context of medical genetics in developing country.

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