电子人体内的人工胰腺

Anthony Ryan Hatch, J. T. Gordon, Sonya R. Sternlieb
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引用次数: 1

摘要

新的人工胰腺系统包括一个附着在身体上的血糖传感器,用于跟踪血糖水平,一个与传感器通信的胰岛素输注泵,以及集成两个系统的新软件。人造胰腺被认为是革命性的,因为它的闭环设计,这意味着机器可以在没有患者直接干预的情况下提供胰岛素。它可以读取血糖,并根据算法注射胰岛素。但是,用于企业人工胰腺的硬件是昂贵的,其软件代码是封闭的。然而,受过良好教育、精通技术的糖尿病患者多年来一直在依靠小规模制造、开源软件和对企业硬件的创造性改造,打造自己的全自动DIY (DIY)人工胰腺。在本章中,我们追踪公司和DIY人工胰腺,因为他们在一个不是每个人都能成为糖尿病电子人的内容中努力解决设计和可访问性问题。企业人工胰腺为半机械人提供了低水平的代理权,对自己的数据没有所有权和控制权;它还要求获得健康保险,以便采购和使用该技术。DIY人工胰腺为患者提供了一个更强大的代理,但也需要高水平的智力资本来破解设备并使系统安全工作。我们认为,在DIY运动中增加代理、彻底民主化生物技术和扩大信息所有权的努力具有意识形态和社会不平等的特征,这些不平等也定义了企业的发展道路。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Artificial Pancreas in Cyborg Bodies
The new artificial pancreas system includes a body-attached blood glucose sensor that tracks glucose levels, a worn insulin infusion pump that communicates with the sensor, and features new software that integrates the two systems. The artificial pancreas is purportedly revolutionary because of its closed-loop design, which means that the machine can give insulin without direct patient intervention. It can read a blood sugar and administer insulin based on an algorithm. But, the hardware for the corporate artificial pancreas is expensive and its software code is closed-access. Yet, well-educated, tech-savvy diabetics have been fashioning their own fully automated do-it-yourself (DIY) artificial pancreases for years, relying on small-scale manufacturing, open-source software, and inventive repurposing of corporate hardware. In this chapter, we trace the corporate and DIY artificial pancreases as they grapple with issues of design and accessibility in a content where not everyone can become a diabetic cyborg. The corporate artificial pancreas offers the cyborg low levels of agency and no ownership and control over his or her own data; it also requires access to health insurance in order to procure and use the technology. The DIY artificial pancreas offers patients a more robust of agency but also requires high levels of intellectual capital to hack the devices and make the system work safely. We argue that efforts to increase agency, radically democratize biotechnology, and expand information ownership in the DIY movement are characterized by ideologies and social inequalities that also define corporate pathways.
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