大流行应对和卫生系统的优势:基于COVID-19的全球艾滋病历史回顾

IF 1 2区 哲学 Q2 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Isis Pub Date : 2023-09-02 DOI:10.1086/726985
Reiko Kanazawa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文调查了全球应对艾滋病毒/艾滋病的史学。自1981年首次发现这种疾病以来,医学和生物科学在了解这种新病毒对人体免疫系统的影响方面取得了巨大进展。虽然目前还没有成功的疫苗,但抗逆转录病毒治疗继续提高艾滋病毒阳性患者健康长寿的可能性。我们也看到了一些令人兴奋的完全康复的病例,这将使科学家们能够探索治疗的新途径。然而,艾滋病的流行绝不是结束:4 000万人已经死亡,3 500多万人仍然感染艾滋病毒。更重要的是,自20世纪80年代初以来,人文和社会科学领域的历史学家和学者一直指出,艾滋病毒揭示了非医学因素如何在成功的疾病应对中发挥关键作用。随着全球社会面临一场新的大流行的后果,研究更广泛的社会、经济、政治和文化因素如何影响个人在地方、国家、国际和全球范围内的疾病经历是及时的。这篇文章考察了学者们如何使用各种方法和途径,从传统医学史到发展人类学,从历史上写关于艾滋病毒大流行的文章。尽管艾滋病引发了来自各个学科的大量历史反思,但它的当代性意味着“全球艾滋病史学”还不能被描述为一个有凝聚力的学术对话。然而,这篇文章认为,这些学术研究的统一之处在于,它利用艾滋病毒来研究战后社会和经济制度如何以及为什么为一些人群实现了健康目标,而不是为其他人群实现了健康目标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pandemic Responses and the Strengths of Health Systems: A Review of Global AIDS Historiography in Light of COVID-19
This paper surveys the historiography of the global response to HIV/AIDS. Since 1981, when the disease was first identified, there have been great strides in the medical and biological sciences in understanding the impact of the new virus on the human immune system. Although there is still no successful vaccine, antiretroviral (ART) treatment continues to improve the likelihood of HIV-positive people living long and healthy lives. We have also seen a few exciting cases of full recovery, which will allow scientists to explore new avenues towards a cure. Yet the AIDS pandemic is by no means over: 40 million have died and over 35 million individuals still live with HIV. More importantly, as historians and scholars in the humanities and social sciences have been pointing out since the early 1980s, HIV brought to light how non-medical factors play a critical role in a successful disease response. As the global community faces the aftermath of a new pandemic, it is timely to examine how broader social, economic, political, and cultural factors influence individual experiences of disease at local, national, international, and global scales. This essay examines how scholars have written historically about the HIV pandemic, using a variety of methods and approaches: from traditional histories of medicine to anthropologies of development. While HIV has sparked a massive corpus of historical reflection from a variety of disciplines, its contemporaneity means that “global AIDS historiography” cannot yet be described as a cohesive academic conversation. Yet what unites the scholarship, this essay argues, is its use of HIV to examine how and why post-war social and economic systems have achieved health objectives for some populations and not others.
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来源期刊
Isis
Isis 管理科学-科学史与科学哲学
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
16.70%
发文量
150
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Since its inception in 1912, Isis has featured scholarly articles, research notes, and commentary on the history of science, medicine, and technology and their cultural influences. Review essays and book reviews on new contributions to the discipline are also included. An official publication of the History of Science Society, Isis is the oldest English-language journal in the field. The Press, along with the journal’s editorial office in Starkville, MS, would like to acknowledge the following supporters: Mississippi State University, its College of Arts and Sciences and History Department, and the Consortium for the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine.
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