With the expanding pharmaceuticalization of public health, anthropologists have begun to examine how biomedicine's promissory discourses of normalization and demarginalization give rise to new practices of and criteria for citizenship. Much of this work focuses on the biomedicine-citizenship nexus in less-developed, resource-poor contexts. But how do we understand this relationship in resource-rich settings where medicines are readily available, often affordable, and a highly commonplace response to illness? In particular, what does it mean to not use pharmaceuticals for a treatable infectious disease in this context? We are interested in these questions in relation to the recent push for early and universal treatment for HIV infection in A...
This paper responds to limited evidence of the social and political aspects of health biotechnologie...
AIMS: We explored social factors affecting access to antiretroviral HIV treatment (ART) among people...
In this paper we examine the work of bioethics in the enactment of medically drugged bodies by focus...
With the expanding pharmaceuticalization of public health, anthropologists have begun to examine how...
The use of HIV Treatment as Prevention (TasP) has radically changed our understandings of HIV risk a...
In this article, I revisit the question of whether HIV can ever be reimagined and re-embodied as a p...
The ‘cascade of care’ construct is increasingly used in public health to map the trajectory of local...
Drawing on qualitative interview accounts with people who have injected drugs, we deploy ideas of bi...
In this article we examine how injection drug users who do not attribute their HIV infection to enga...
In this article, we examine how injection drug users who do not attribute their HIV infection to eng...
Positive Plus One is the first large-scale mixed methods study of mixed HIV serostatus couples in Ca...
With around five million people accessing anti-retroviral treatment, which significantly reduces mor...
Treatment as prevention® (TasP®) proposes a new way to end AIDS by requiring people living with HIV/...
Much anthropology has considered the social embeddedness of medical systems, personnel, and practice...
Despite the life-preserving benefits of antiretroviral therapy (ART), some people living with HIV (P...
This paper responds to limited evidence of the social and political aspects of health biotechnologie...
AIMS: We explored social factors affecting access to antiretroviral HIV treatment (ART) among people...
In this paper we examine the work of bioethics in the enactment of medically drugged bodies by focus...
With the expanding pharmaceuticalization of public health, anthropologists have begun to examine how...
The use of HIV Treatment as Prevention (TasP) has radically changed our understandings of HIV risk a...
In this article, I revisit the question of whether HIV can ever be reimagined and re-embodied as a p...
The ‘cascade of care’ construct is increasingly used in public health to map the trajectory of local...
Drawing on qualitative interview accounts with people who have injected drugs, we deploy ideas of bi...
In this article we examine how injection drug users who do not attribute their HIV infection to enga...
In this article, we examine how injection drug users who do not attribute their HIV infection to eng...
Positive Plus One is the first large-scale mixed methods study of mixed HIV serostatus couples in Ca...
With around five million people accessing anti-retroviral treatment, which significantly reduces mor...
Treatment as prevention® (TasP®) proposes a new way to end AIDS by requiring people living with HIV/...
Much anthropology has considered the social embeddedness of medical systems, personnel, and practice...
Despite the life-preserving benefits of antiretroviral therapy (ART), some people living with HIV (P...
This paper responds to limited evidence of the social and political aspects of health biotechnologie...
AIMS: We explored social factors affecting access to antiretroviral HIV treatment (ART) among people...
In this paper we examine the work of bioethics in the enactment of medically drugged bodies by focus...