Literature DB >> 26484946

When the science fails and the ethics works: 'Fail-safe' ethics in the FEM-PrEP study.

Patricia Kingori1.   

Abstract

This paper will explore the concept of 'fail safe' ethics in the FEM PrEP trial, and the practice of research and ethics on the ground. FEM-PrEP examined the efficacy of PrEP in African women after promising outcomes in research conducted with MSM. This was a hugely optimistic time and FEM-PrEP was mobilised using rights-based ethical arguments that women should have access to PrEP. This paper will present data collected during an ethnographic study of frontline research workers involved in FEM-PrEP. During our discussions, 'fail-safe' ethics emerged as concept that encapsulated their confidence that their ethics could not fail. However, in 2011, FEM-PrEP was halted and deemed a failure. The women involved in the study were held responsible because contrary to researcher's expectations they were not taking the oral PrEP being researched. This examination of FEM-PrEP will show that ethical arguments are increasingly deployed to mobilise, maintain and in some cases stop trials in ways which, at times, are superseded or co-opted by other interests. While promoting the interests of women, rights-based approaches are argued to indirectly justify the continuation of individualised, biomedical interventions which have been problematic in other women-centred trials. In this examination of FEM-PrEP, the rights-based approach obscured: ethical concerns beyond access to PrEP; the complexities of power relationships between donor and host countries; the operations of the HIV industry in research-saturated areas and the cumulative effect of unfilled expectations in HIV research and how this has shaped ideas of research and ethics.

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Keywords:  Africa; PrEP; failure; fieldworkers; women

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26484946     DOI: 10.1080/13648470.2015.1081378

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anthropol Med        ISSN: 1364-8470


  2 in total

1.  The masking and making of fieldworkers and data in postcolonial Global Health research contexts.

Authors:  Patricia Kingori; René Gerrets
Journal:  Crit Public Health       Date:  2019-06-04

Review 2.  Clinical Considerations in the Selection of Preexposure Prophylaxis for HIV Prevention in Canada.

Authors:  David C Knox; Robert Pilarski; Harvinder S Dhunna; Amit Kaushal; Jonathan D Adachi
Journal:  Can J Infect Dis Med Microbiol       Date:  2022-08-30       Impact factor: 2.585

  2 in total

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