通过母体微生物组培育未来。

IF 2.7 2区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Roberta Pala, Katherine Kenny
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引用次数: 0

摘要

近来,人们越来越认识到我们的微生物亲属具有生产和保护功能,以及 "共生 "微生物在支持和维持健康方面的关键作用。目前的微生物学和药理学文献越来越多地强调母体肠道微生物群在母婴长期健康中的作用。根据从受孕到孩子出生后最初几年向澳大利亚父母提供的信息和建议,我们考虑了其中关于需要通过管理母体微生物群来确保胎儿/未来孩子持久、最佳健康状态的信息。我们认为,这种 "后巴斯德时代 "的趋势产生了一种新的集体的、超越人类的关爱关系,但同时也是一种纪律关系,它将母体微生物组定位为一个新的审查场所,使母亲承担了过多的责任和负担。我们注意到微生物组研究是如何被用来将母性重塑为一种微观(生物)管理形式,以及如何将母性维持为一个医学化的过程。在向父母介绍这些资源的方式中,缺少了这项研究可以提供的女权主义和超越人类的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nurturing futures through the maternal microbiome.

Recently there has been growing recognition of the productive and protective features of our microbial kin and the crucial role of 'commensal' microbes in supporting and sustaining health. Current microbiological and pharmacological literature is increasingly highlighting the role of maternal gut microbiomes in the long-term health of both mothers and children. Drawing on the information and advice directed towards Australian parents from conception through the first years of a child's life, we consider its messaging about the need to secure for the foetus/future-child an enduring, optimal state of health by managing the maternal microbiome. We argue that this post-Pasteurian trend gives rise to relations of care that are, at once, newly collective and more-than-human-but also disciplinary in ways that position the maternal microbiome as a new site of scrutiny that disproportionately responsibilises and burdens mothers. We notice how microbiome research is used both to reframe motherhood as a form of micro(bial)-management and to maintain motherhood as a medicalised process. The feminist and more-than-human potential that this research can provide is missing in the way these resources are presented to parents.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.90%
发文量
156
期刊介绍: Sociology of Health & Illness is an international journal which publishes sociological articles on all aspects of health, illness, medicine and health care. We welcome empirical and theoretical contributions in this field.
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