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States of Resistance: nosocomial and environmental approaches to antimicrobial resistance in Lebanon.
Haraoui, Louis-Patrick; Rizk, Anthony; Landecker, Hannah.
Affiliation
  • Haraoui LP; Department of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, QC, Canada.
  • Rizk A; Centre de Recherche Charles-Le Moyne, CISSS Montérégie-Centre, Greenfield Park, QC, Canada.
  • Landecker H; Department of Anthropology and Sociology, Geneva Graduate Institute (IHEID), Geneva, Switzerland.
Hist Philos Life Sci ; 46(3): 28, 2024 Aug 01.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39090452
ABSTRACT
Drawing on institutional historical records, interviews and student theses, this article charts the intersection of hospital acquired illness, the emergence of antimicrobial resistance (AMR), environments of armed conflict, and larger questions of social governance in the specific case of the American University of Beirut Medical Center (AUBMC) in Lebanon. Taking a methodological cue from approaches in contemporary scientific work that understand non-clinical settings as a fundamental aspect of the history and development of AMR, we treat the hospital as not just nested in a set of social and environmental contexts, but frequently housing within itself elements of social and environmental history. AMR in Lebanon differs in important ways from the settings in which global protocols for infection control or rubrics for risk factor identification for resistant nosocomial outbreaks were originally generated. While such differences are all too often depicted as failures of low and middle-income countries (LMIC) to maintain universal standards, the historical question before us is quite the reverse how have the putatively universal rubrics of AMR and hospital infection control failed to take account of social and environmental conditions that clearly matter deeply in the evolution and spread of resistance? Focusing on conditions of war as an organized chaos in which social, environmental and clinical factors shift dramatically, on the social and political topography of patient transfer, and on a missing "meso" level of AMR surveillance between the local and global settings, we show how a multisectoral One Health approach to AMR could be enriched by an answering multisectoral methodology in history, particularly one that unsettles a canonical focus on the story of AMR in the Euro-American context.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Cross Infection Limits: Humans Country/Region as subject: Asia Language: En Journal: Hist Philos Life Sci Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Country of publication:

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Cross Infection Limits: Humans Country/Region as subject: Asia Language: En Journal: Hist Philos Life Sci Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Country of publication: