Assembling organ donation: situating organ donation in hospital practice

被引:4
作者
Bea, Sara [1 ]
机构
[1] Kings Coll London, Fac Social Sci & Publ Policy, Sch Global Affairs, Dept Global Hlth & Social Med, London, England
基金
瑞典研究理事会; 英国经济与社会研究理事会;
关键词
ethnography; hospitals; organ donation; policy analysis; STS; DEATH; TRANSPLANTATION; PHENOMENOLOGY; DISCOURSE; SCIENCE;
D O I
10.1111/1467-9566.13177
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
In this article I argue for the need to situate deceased organ donation in and as a hospital practice. This study puts the spotlight on the practical conditions that enable and emplace organ donation in the hospital setting. The analytical move serves the political purpose to inform and interrogate dominant policy framings intended to address the problem of organ shortage. I present an ethnographic investigation that draws upon a Science and Technology Studies (STS) approach to make visible the sociomaterial arrangements that bring together people, things and politics in the assembling of organ donation at a Catalan hospital. A progressive and indeterminate process which might fall through and become disassembled at any given time. This, as I explain, challenges current opt-out policy that unnecessarily reduces donation to an individual choice to be decided upon in life. Instead, and drawing on ethnographic materials, I propose a situated and relational understanding of organ donation: an embedded health care and procurement practice enacted as a collective accomplishment. I conclude that (more) responsible donation policies need to be informed by, and attuned to, the situated practicalities and enduring tensions that condition and constrain the assembling of organ donation at the hospital setting.
引用
收藏
页码:1934 / 1948
页数:15
相关论文
共 45 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 2010, BRIT MED J
[2]   From co-location to co-presence: Shifts in the use of ethnography for the study of knowledge [J].
Beaulieu, Anne .
SOCIAL STUDIES OF SCIENCE, 2010, 40 (03) :453-470
[3]   Presumed consent Authors' reply [J].
Bird, Sheila ;
Harris, John .
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2010, 340
[4]  
Brennan S., 2015, GUARDIAN
[5]   Opting-out systems: no guarantee for higher donation rates [J].
Coppen, R ;
Friele, RD ;
Marquet, RL ;
Gevers, SKM .
TRANSPLANT INTERNATIONAL, 2005, 18 (11) :1275-1279
[6]   Organ Transplantation 1 A call for government accountability to achieve national self-sufficiency in organ donation and transplantation [J].
Delmonico, Francis L. ;
Dominguez-Gil, Beatriz ;
Matesanz, Rafael ;
Noel, Luc .
LANCET, 2011, 378 (9800) :1414-1418
[7]  
Department of Health, 2008, ORGANS TRANSPLANTS R
[8]   Editorial: Towards a sociology of donation [J].
Dimond, Rebecca ;
Machin, Laura ;
Frith, Lucy .
SOCIOLOGY OF HEALTH & ILLNESS, 2019, 41 (03) :549-552
[9]   Presumed consent: a distraction in the quest for increasing rates of organ donation [J].
Fabre, John ;
Murphy, Paul ;
Matesanz, Rafael .
BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2010, 341 :922-925
[10]  
Fox ReneeC., 1992, Spare Parts: Organ Replacement in American Society