Subjectivités et constructions sociales d’un risque iatrogène : (in)visibilités des lipodystrophies au Sénégal

Individual perceptions of the risk of drug-related adverse effects, whether anticipated before initiation of treatment or readjusted during treatment, are closely linked to social representations of damage. The ethnographic analysis conducted in Senegal on lipodystrophies due to certain antiretrovir...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alice Desclaux, Sokhna Boye
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Association Anthropologie Médicale Appliquée au Développement et à la Santé 2019-06-01
Series:Anthropologie & Santé
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/anthropologiesante/5134
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Individual perceptions of the risk of drug-related adverse effects, whether anticipated before initiation of treatment or readjusted during treatment, are closely linked to social representations of damage. The ethnographic analysis conducted in Senegal on lipodystrophies due to certain antiretrovirals shows very different subjective perceptions, in a specific relationship to the social context. It also reveals a collective dynamic of invisibilisation based, on one hand, on a micro-social logic of avoidance of suffering in the absence of curative treatment and, on the other hand, on a symbolic logic of “price to pay” for the effectiveness of antiretrovirals. The model of patients’ “balancing” iatrogenic risk and efficacy seems relevant only if the drug is apprehended with its complex social inscription, using both concepts of “social life” and “political biography” of pharmaceuticals.
ISSN:2111-5028