Pharmaceuticalization: AIDS treatment and global health politics

被引:111
作者
Biehl, Joao [1 ]
机构
[1] Princeton Univ, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA
关键词
AIDS treatment; global health; pharmaceuticalization; market-based biopolitics; contemporary Brazil; political subjectivity;
D O I
10.1353/anq.2007.0056
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
This article examines the political economy of pharmaceuticals that lies behind global AIDS treatment initiatives, revealing the possibilities and inequalities that come with a magic bullet approach to health care. It tells how Brazil, against all odds, became the first developing country to universalize access to antiretroviral drugs-a breakthrough made possible by an unexpected alliance of activists, government reformers, development agencies, and the pharmaceutical industry. The article moves between a social analysis of the institutional practices shaping the Brazilian response to AIDS and the stories and lives of people affected by it. it draws from interviews with activists, policy makers, and corporate actors and from longitudinal ethnographic work among grassroots AIDS core services. Pharmaceutical innovations allow unlikely coalitions that both expose the inadequacies of reigning public health paradigms and act to reform, if to a limited extent, global values and mechanisms (of drug pricing and of types of medical and philanthropic interventions, for example). Treatment rollouts are matters of intense negotiation; their local realizations are shaped by contingency and uncertainty. Such realizations encode diverse economic and political interests, as well as the needs and desires of citizens. These therapeutic coalitions also expose the deficiencies of national and local infrastructures and consolidate novel state-civil society relations. A pharmaceutically-centered model of public health has emerged as a byproduct of AIDS treatment scale-up and the sustainability of the Brazilian AIDS policy has to be constantly renegotiated in light of global drug markets. A multitude of networks and variations in AIDS care have emerged on-the-ground, and the article explores why AIDS treatment has been so difficult to put into practice among poor Brazilians, who are often stigmatized as noncompliant or untreatable, becoming invisible to the public. Poor AIDS patients live in a state of flux, simultaneously acknowledging and disguising their condition while they participate in local economies of salvation. At both the macro and micro levels, we see a state of triage and a politics of survival crystallizing.
引用
收藏
页码:1083 / 1126
页数:44
相关论文
共 69 条
[1]   Experiences of stigma and access to HAART in children and adolescents living with HIV/AIDS in Brazil [J].
Abadía-Barrero, CE ;
Castro, A .
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 2006, 62 (05) :1219-1228
[2]   Globalization, power and survival:: an anthropological perspective [J].
Abeles, Marc .
ANTHROPOLOGICAL QUARTERLY, 2006, 79 (03) :483-508
[3]  
[Anonymous], NY TIMES MAGAZI 0128
[4]  
[Anonymous], SAUDE DESENVOLVIMENT
[5]  
[Anonymous], 2007, ETHNOG STUD SUBJ
[6]  
[Anonymous], 2007, INVISIBLE CURE AFRIC
[7]  
APPLBAUM K, 2006, GLOBAL PHARM MARKETS
[8]  
Asad Talal., 2004, ANTHR MARGINS STATE
[9]  
BASTOS C, 1999, GLOBAL RESPONSES AID
[10]   THE SOCIAL GEOGRAPHY OF AIDS IN BRAZIL [J].
BASTOS, FI ;
BARCELLOS, C .
REVISTA DE SAUDE PUBLICA, 1995, 29 (01) :52-62