Literature DB >> 32099577

BRCA patients in Cuba, Greece and Germany: Comparative perspectives on public health, the state and the partial reproduction of 'neoliberal' subjects.

Sahra Gibbon1, Eirini Kampriani1, Andrea Zur Nieden2.   

Abstract

The relationship among genetic technologies, biosocial identity and patient subjectivity has been the focus of an increasing range of social science literature. Examining mainly European and North American contexts this work has demonstrated the variable configurations of genetic knowledge-practices and the diverse implications for at-risk individuals and populations. This article brings together ethnographic research on genomic medicine, public health and breast cancer in Cuba, Greece and Germany. Although each case study addresses different publics/patients, institutional settings and risk-related practices, they all critically examine 'neoliberal' subjectivity and BRCA patienthood, at the intersection of political rationalities, medical discourses, social conditions and moral codes. In the Cuban case, cultural articulations of inherited and other embodied risks relating to breast cancer are analysed in relation to state provision of 'community genetics', and the shifting dynamics of public health in response to global social processes. The Greek case explores how culturally embedded values, notions of inherited risk and care inform or are re-articulated through institutional practices and ambivalent subject positions, at the meeting point between individualised medicine, religious philanthropy and the particularities of public health. In the German context, diverging patient subjectivities are examined against the background of prevailing social discourses and institutionalised risk management practices that promote proactive individuality. Drawing on deconstructive and feminist analyses, these case studies reveal how normative 'neoliberal' patient subjects are only 'partially reproduced' in situated contexts, neither stable nor homogeneous, as different actors and publics variously articulate, embrace or engage with transnational as well as culturally embedded discourses and health practices.

Entities:  

Keywords:  BRCA; Cuba; Germany; Greece; neoliberal subjectivity; patienthood

Year:  2010        PMID: 32099577      PMCID: PMC7041971          DOI: 10.1057/biosoc.2010.28

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosocieties        ISSN: 1745-8552


  18 in total

Review 1.  Collective fear, individualized risk: the social and cultural context of genetic testing for breast cancer.

Authors:  N Press; J R Fishman; B A Koenig
Journal:  Nurs Ethics       Date:  2000-05       Impact factor: 2.874

Review 2.  Odds and ends: risk, mortality, and the politics of contingency.

Authors:  Thomas M Malaby
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2002-09

3.  Lessons from the margins of globalization: appreciating the Cuban health paradox.

Authors:  Jerry M Spiegel; Annalee Yassi
Journal:  J Public Health Policy       Date:  2004       Impact factor: 2.222

Review 4.  Psychosocial aspects of risk communication and mutation testing in familial breast-ovarian cancer.

Authors:  Penny Hopwood
Journal:  Curr Opin Oncol       Date:  2005-07       Impact factor: 3.645

5.  The Cuban health care system and factors currently undermining it.

Authors:  K Nayeri
Journal:  J Community Health       Date:  1995-08

6.  Between religious philanthropy and individualised medicine: situating inherited breast cancer risk in Greece.

Authors:  Eirini Kampriani
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2009-08-01

7.  Reproduction as spiritual kin work: orthodoxy, IVF, and the moral economy of motherhood in Greece.

Authors:  Heather Paxson
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2006-12

8.  Repositioning the patient: the implications of being 'at risk'.

Authors:  S Scott; L Prior; F Wood; J Gray
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2005-04       Impact factor: 4.634

9.  The gift of health: Socialist medical practice and shifting material and moral economies in post-Soviet Cuba.

Authors:  Elise Andaya
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2009-12

10.  Sonography and sociality: obstetrical ultrasound imaging in urban Vietnam.

Authors:  Tine Gammeltoft
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2007-06
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  1 in total

1.  A qualitative reflexive thematic analysis into the experiences of being identified with a BRCA1/2 gene alteration: "So many little, little traumas could have been avoided".

Authors:  Nikolett Zsuzsanna Warner; AnnMarie Groarke
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2022-08-06       Impact factor: 2.908

  1 in total

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