Literature DB >> 29380412

From Drug Safety to Drug Security: A Contemporary Shift in the Policing of Health.

Julia Hornberger1.   

Abstract

The counterfeiting of medication is increasingly seen as a major threat to health, especially in the light of both the everyday reliance on and a broadening of world-wide access to pharmaceuticals. Exaggerated or real, this threat has inaugurated, this article argues, a shift from a drug safety regime to a drug security regime that governs the flow of pharmaceuticals and brings together markets, police, and health actors in new ways. This entails a shift from soft disciplinary means aimed at incremental and continued inclusion of defaulters, to one of drastically sovereign measures of exclusion and banishment aimed at fake goods and the people associated with them, in the name of health. Through a multi-sited ethnographic study, this article shows how such new drug security efforts play themselves out especially in (South) Africa, highlighting a modus operandi of spectacular performativity and of working through suspicion and association rather than factuality, producing value less so for those in need of health than for a petty security industry itself.
© 2018 by the American Anthropological Association.

Entities:  

Keywords:  South Africa; counterfeit medication; pharmaceuticals; security

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29380412     DOI: 10.1111/maq.12432

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol Q        ISSN: 0745-5194


  2 in total

1.  The case of the 'Spurious Drugs Kingpin': shifting pills in Chennai, India.

Authors:  Sarah Hodges
Journal:  Crit Public Health       Date:  2019-06-04

2.  The ghost in the data: Evidence gaps and the problem of fake drugs in global health research.

Authors:  Sarah Hodges; Emma Garnett
Journal:  Glob Public Health       Date:  2020-03-31
  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.