权衡未来:后基因组时代的种族、科学和妊娠试验

IF 0.3 4区 社会学 Q4 SOCIOLOGY
Ophra Leyser-Whalen
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Valdez also conducted interviews with clinical trial staff members, PIs, and research collaborators in the United States and the United Kingdom. Lest you think this book is dry reporting, Valdez sprinkles each chapter with theoretically rich concepts of racial surveillance biocapitalism connected to scientific knowledge production. She outlines capitalism’s reliance on ideas of individual responsibility, which leads to a disinvestment in public health and investment in privatization of medical research. Topics such as medical surveillance and its propensity to translate human experiences into behavioral data, its ties to racism, and its consideration of environmental factors are also interwoven into each chapter analysis. Readers learn that medical recommendations about whether to monitor pregnant women’s weight and the amount of weight gain that is ideal has shifted historically and cross-culturally between the United States and the United Kingdom. Presently, monitoring weight gain is the idea du jour, and there are currently more clinical trials that target pregnant people for lifestyle interventions than ever before. These trials focus on speculation to predict and prevent future health problems, and Valdez aptly notes, ‘‘Those who are in the position to speculate . . . on future remedies are not the ones who suffer the consequences of failed predictions’’ (p. 14). What is problematic, Valdez argues, is that individual lifestyle interventions are symptomatic of systemic racism and ignore social-environmental factors that affect people’s lives and health, therefore making the interventions ineffective. The ideology behind the clinical trials and their interventions assume that certain people’s pregnant bodies are risky and that these people have the ability to modify their bodies and behaviors, which also feeds into the gendered assumption that mothers are solely responsible for their children’s health. These bodies then become subject to interventions. These prenatal trials are conducted in the current postgenomic era, which refers to the period following the completion of the human genome project at the turn of the twenty-first century. Through the human genome project, scientists discovered that genes alone do not explain human variation and development. Thus, although these prenatal trials draw from theories on epigenetics (the gene-environment connection) and the developmental origins of health and disease, their design and proposed solutions to current and future health problems do not focus on disease-causing environmental factors that disproportionately afflict communities of color. Valdez notes that having diverse samples in medical research often results in comparing health outcomes across racialethnic groups rather than examining how racism affects health. In essence, pregnancy trials fail to recognize the multitude of factors that affect maternal and fetal environments. 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引用次数: 4

摘要

《权衡未来:后基因组时代的种族、科学和妊娠试验》是第一本研究美国和英国产前试验的社会、政治和健康影响的书,这些试验研究了妊娠期体重增加和儿童期体重增加之间的关系。大多数(如果不是全部的话)循证医学都是在北美和欧洲资助和设计的,目的是使数据和结果能够在全球范围内推广。这本书基于多年来收集的大量定性数据,Natali Valdez从中得出了她的分析:健康和相关政策的档案研究,数百次产前临床试验访视的参与者观察,以及参加关于肥胖和妊娠试验的国家和网络研讨会。瓦尔迪兹还采访了美国和英国的临床试验工作人员、PI和研究合作者。为了避免你认为这本书是枯燥的报道,瓦尔迪兹在每一章都加入了与科学知识生产相关的种族监控生物资本主义的理论丰富的概念。她概述了资本主义对个人责任观念的依赖,这导致了对公共卫生的撤资和对医疗研究私有化的投资。医疗监测及其将人类经验转化为行为数据的倾向、与种族主义的联系以及对环境因素的考虑等主题也交织在每一章的分析中。读者了解到,关于是否监测孕妇体重和理想体重增加量的医学建议在美国和英国之间发生了历史性和跨文化的变化。目前,监测体重增加是目前的想法,目前针对孕妇进行生活方式干预的临床试验比以往任何时候都多。这些试验侧重于预测和预防未来健康问题的推测,瓦尔迪兹恰当地指出,“那些能够推测的人。未来的补救措施不是那些遭受失败预测后果的人”(第14页)。瓦尔迪兹认为,问题在于,个人生活方式干预是系统性种族主义的症状,忽视了影响人们生活和健康的社会环境因素,因此使干预无效。临床试验及其干预措施背后的意识形态认为,某些人怀孕的身体有风险,这些人有能力改变自己的身体和行为,这也助长了母亲对孩子的健康全权负责的性别假设。这些机构随后受到干预。这些产前试验是在当前的后基因组时代进行的,这是指21世纪之交人类基因组项目完成后的时期。通过人类基因组计划,科学家们发现仅靠基因并不能解释人类的变异和发育。因此,尽管这些产前试验借鉴了表观遗传学(基因与环境的联系)以及健康和疾病的发育起源理论,但它们的设计和针对当前和未来健康问题提出的解决方案并没有关注对有色人种群体造成过大影响的致病环境因素。瓦尔迪兹指出,在医学研究中使用不同的样本往往会比较不同种族群体的健康结果,而不是研究种族主义如何影响健康。从本质上讲,妊娠试验没有认识到影响母体和胎儿环境的众多因素。正如瓦尔迪兹所写,尽管美国国立卫生研究院授权在临床研究中增加多样性,但减少种族化群体健康差异的既定目标尚未实现。也许是因为妊娠试验中解释变量的关注范围狭窄,迄今为止没有妊娠试验证实评论385
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Weighing the Future: Race, Science, and Pregnancy Trials in the Postgenomic Era
Weighing the Future: Race, Science, and Pregnancy Trials in the Postgenomic Era is the first book of its kind to examine the social, political, and health implications of prenatal trials in the United States and the United Kingdom that study associations between gestational weight gain and childhood weight gain. Most, if not all, evidence-based medicine is funded and designed in North America and Europe, with the aim of enabling the generalizability of data and results globally. This book is based on years of massive qualitative data collection from which Natali Valdez draws her analyses: archival research on health and related policies, participant observation of hundreds of prenatal clinical trial visits with patients, and attendance at national and webinar conferences on obesity and pregnancy trials. Valdez also conducted interviews with clinical trial staff members, PIs, and research collaborators in the United States and the United Kingdom. Lest you think this book is dry reporting, Valdez sprinkles each chapter with theoretically rich concepts of racial surveillance biocapitalism connected to scientific knowledge production. She outlines capitalism’s reliance on ideas of individual responsibility, which leads to a disinvestment in public health and investment in privatization of medical research. Topics such as medical surveillance and its propensity to translate human experiences into behavioral data, its ties to racism, and its consideration of environmental factors are also interwoven into each chapter analysis. Readers learn that medical recommendations about whether to monitor pregnant women’s weight and the amount of weight gain that is ideal has shifted historically and cross-culturally between the United States and the United Kingdom. Presently, monitoring weight gain is the idea du jour, and there are currently more clinical trials that target pregnant people for lifestyle interventions than ever before. These trials focus on speculation to predict and prevent future health problems, and Valdez aptly notes, ‘‘Those who are in the position to speculate . . . on future remedies are not the ones who suffer the consequences of failed predictions’’ (p. 14). What is problematic, Valdez argues, is that individual lifestyle interventions are symptomatic of systemic racism and ignore social-environmental factors that affect people’s lives and health, therefore making the interventions ineffective. The ideology behind the clinical trials and their interventions assume that certain people’s pregnant bodies are risky and that these people have the ability to modify their bodies and behaviors, which also feeds into the gendered assumption that mothers are solely responsible for their children’s health. These bodies then become subject to interventions. These prenatal trials are conducted in the current postgenomic era, which refers to the period following the completion of the human genome project at the turn of the twenty-first century. Through the human genome project, scientists discovered that genes alone do not explain human variation and development. Thus, although these prenatal trials draw from theories on epigenetics (the gene-environment connection) and the developmental origins of health and disease, their design and proposed solutions to current and future health problems do not focus on disease-causing environmental factors that disproportionately afflict communities of color. Valdez notes that having diverse samples in medical research often results in comparing health outcomes across racialethnic groups rather than examining how racism affects health. In essence, pregnancy trials fail to recognize the multitude of factors that affect maternal and fetal environments. As Valdez writes, despite the mandate from the National Institutes of Health to include more diversity in clinical research, the intended goal of reducing health disparities across racialized groups has not been realized. Perhaps because of the narrow focus of explanatory variables in pregnancy trials, no pregnancy trial to date has confirmed Reviews 385
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