Literature DB >> 34190020

Treating risk, risking treatment: experiences of iatrogenesis in the HIV/AIDS and opioid epidemics.

Lauren Textor1, William Schlesinger1.   

Abstract

This paper explores how poor health outcomes in the HIV/AIDS and opioid epidemics in the United States are undergirded by iatrogenesis. Data are drawn from two projects in Southern California: one among men who have sex with men (MSM) engaging with pre-exposure prophylaxis to HIV (PrEP) and the other in a public hospital system encountering patients with chronic pain and opioid use disorder (OUD). Ethnographic evidence demonstrates how efforts to minimize risk via PrEP and opioid prescription regulation paradoxically generate new forms of risk. Biomedical risk management paradigms engaged across the paper's two ethnographic field sites hinge on the production and governance of deserving patienthood, which is defined by providers and experienced by patients through moral judgments about risk underlying both increased surveillance and abandonment. This paper argues that the logic of deservingness disconnects clinical evaluations of risk from patients' lived, intersectional experiences of race, class, gender, and sexuality. This paper's analysis thus re-locates patients in the context of broader historical and sociopolitical trajectories to highlight how notions of clinical risk designed to protect patients can in fact imperil them. Misalignment between official, clinical constructions of risk and the embodied experience of risk borne by patients produces iatrogenesis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  HIV/AIDS; Risk; iatrogenesis; opioids

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34190020      PMCID: PMC8639210          DOI: 10.1080/13648470.2021.1926916

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


  35 in total

Review 1.  What people want from sex and preexposure prophylaxis.

Authors:  Robert M Grant; Kimberly A Koester
Journal:  Curr Opin HIV AIDS       Date:  2016-01       Impact factor: 4.283

2.  Risk environments and drug harms: a social science for harm reduction approach.

Authors:  Tim Rhodes
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2009-01-14

Review 3.  Racial and ethnic disparities in pain: causes and consequences of unequal care.

Authors:  Karen O Anderson; Carmen R Green; Richard Payne
Journal:  J Pain       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 5.820

Review 4.  The prescription opioid and heroin crisis: a public health approach to an epidemic of addiction.

Authors:  Andrew Kolodny; David T Courtwright; Catherine S Hwang; Peter Kreiner; John L Eadie; Thomas W Clark; G Caleb Alexander
Journal:  Annu Rev Public Health       Date:  2015-01-12       Impact factor: 21.981

5.  Does more medicine make us sicker? Ivan Illich revisited.

Authors:  Cormac Russell
Journal:  Gac Sanit       Date:  2019-02-02       Impact factor: 2.139

6.  PrEP Disparities.

Authors:  Bridget Kuehn
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2018-12-11       Impact factor: 56.272

Review 7.  To Stop or Not, That Is the Question: Acute Pain Management for the Patient on Chronic Buprenorphine.

Authors:  T Anthony Anderson; Aurora N A Quaye; E Nalan Ward; Timothy E Wilens; Paul E Hilliard; Chad M Brummett
Journal:  Anesthesiology       Date:  2017-06       Impact factor: 7.892

8.  Pain, physical dependence and pseudoaddiction: redefining addiction for 'nice' people?

Authors:  Kirsten Bell; Amy Salmon
Journal:  Int J Drug Policy       Date:  2008-09-02

9.  HIV Preexposure Prophylaxis, by Race and Ethnicity - United States, 2014-2016.

Authors:  Ya-Lin A Huang; Weiming Zhu; Dawn K Smith; Norma Harris; Karen W Hoover
Journal:  MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep       Date:  2018-10-19       Impact factor: 17.586

10.  Queer Theory and Biomedical Practice: The Biomedicalization of Sexuality/The Cultural Politics of Biomedicine.

Authors:  William J Spurlin
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2019-03
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