诊断糖尿病,诊断殖民主义:一种塞内加尔代谢性疾病的分类和计数民族志

E. Bunkley
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引用次数: 3

摘要

这篇文章探讨了全球卫生中经常流传的统计数据自上而下的产生。这些数据必须首先来源于塞内加尔圣路易斯的公立医院、医生办公室、实验室和医疗档案馆。从根本上讲,这些数据是个体身体、经验和亲密诊断时刻的积累。这种汇总将患者分为不同的类别和统计制度,形成了对糖尿病和非传染性疾病的全球健康理解。本文探讨了个人糖尿病诊断时刻本身和当前1型和2型疾病学的政治,这是一种看似中立的二分法,掩盖了塞内加尔、奴隶制、糖生产和消费之间的殖民关系,以及这些关系对塞内加尔当代糖尿病诊断和全球健康概念的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Diagnosing Diabetes, Diagnosing Colonialism: An Ethnography of the Classification and Counting of a Senegalese Metabolic Disease
This article explores the top-down production of the statistics frequently circulated in global health. These data must first originate in a place like the public hospital in Saint-Louis, Senegal, in doctor’s offices and laboratories and medical archives. At their root, these data are an accumulation of individual bodies, experiences, and intimate diagnostic moments. This aggregation turns the afflicted into categories and statistical regimes that shape a global health understanding of diabetes specifically, and noncommunicable diseases broadly. This article explores the individual diabetes diagnostic moment itself and the politics of the current nosology of Type 1 and Type 2, a seemingly neutral dichotomy that belies colonial relationships between Senegal, slavery, sugar production and consumption, and the effects these relationships have on contemporary conceptions of diabetes diagnosis in Senegal and global health.
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