medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Authors: Shore S, Li H, Zhang M, Whitney R, Gross AL, Bhatt AS, Nallamothu BK, Giordani B, Briceño EM, Sussman JB, Gutierrez J, Yaffe K, Griswold M, Johansen MC, Lopez OL, Gottesman RF, Sidney S, Heckbert SR, Rundek T, Hughes TM, Longstreth WT, Levine DA
Volume 9 of Issue 2 | BMJ global health
Authors: Frankfurter R, Malik M, Kpakiwa SD, McGinnis T, Malik MM, Chitre S, Barrie MB, Dibba Y, Mulalu L, Baldwinson R, Fallah M, Rashid I, Kelly JD, Richardson ET
BACKGROUND
Attempts to understand biosocial phenomena using scientific methods are often presented as value-neutral and objective; however, when used to reduce the complexity of open systems such as epidemics, these forms of inquiry necessarily entail normative considerations and are therefore fashioned by political worldviews (ideologies). From the standpoint of poststructural theory, the character of these representations is at most limited and partial. In addition, these modes of representation (as ) do work (as ) in the service of, or in resistance to, power.
METHODS
We focus on a single Ebola case cluster from the 2013-2016 outbreak in West Africa and examine how different disciplinary forms of knowledge production (including outbreak forecasting, active epidemiological surveillance, post-outbreak serosurveys, political economic analyses, and ethnography) function as . We then explore how these technologies are used to curate 'data,' analysing the erasures, values, and imperatives evoked by each.
RESULTS
We call attention to the instrumental-in addition to the descriptive-role Story Technologies play in ordering contingencies and establishing relationships in the wake of health crises.
DISCUSSION
By connecting each type of knowledge production with the systems of power it reinforces or disrupts, we illustrate how Story Technologies do ideological work. These findings encourage research from pluriversal perspectives and advocacy for measures that promote more inclusive modes of knowledge production.
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AIDS and behavior
Authors: Keuroghlian AS, Marc L, Goldhammer H, Massaquoi M, Downes A, Stango J, Bryant H, Cahill S, Yen J, Perez AC, Head JM, Mayer KH, Myers J, Rebchook GM, Bourdeau B, Psihopaidas D, Chavis NS, Cohen SM
European journal of cancer (Oxford, England : 1990)
Authors: Arai H, Yang Y, Baca Y, Millstein J, Denda T, Ou FS, Innocenti F, Takeda H, Kubota Y, Doi A, Horie Y, Umemoto K, Izawa N, Wang J, Battaglin F, Jayachandran P, Algaze S, Soni S, Zhang W, Goldberg RM, Hall MJ, Scott AJ, Hwang JJ, Lou E, Weinberg BA, Marshall J, Goel S, Xiu J, Michael Korn W, Venook AP, Sunakawa Y, Lenz HJ
Prostate cancer and prostatic diseases
Authors: Wise DR, Pachynski RK, Denmeade SR, Aggarwal RR, Deng J, Febles VA, Balar AV, Economides MP, Loomis C, Selvaraj S, Haas M, Kagey MH, Newman W, Baum J, Troxel AB, Griglun S, Leis D, Yang N, Aranchiy V, Machado S, Waalkes E, Gargano G, Soamchand N, Puranik A, Chattopadhyay P, Fedal E, Deng FM, Ren Q, Chiriboga L, Melamed J, Sirard CA, Wong KK
Journal of hepatology
Authors: Norman JS, Mehta N
Journal of pediatric gastroenterology and nutrition
Authors: Himes R, Rosenthal P, Dilwali N, Smith K, Venick R, Gonzalez-Peralta RP
PloS one
Authors: Rios-Fetchko F, Carson M, Tapia M, Fernandez A, Coffman J
Kidney Medicine
Authors: Hernandez R, Xie D, Wang X, Jordan N, Ricardo AC, Anderson AH, Diamantidis CJ, Kusek JW, Yaffe K, Lash JP, Fischer MJ, CRIC Study Investigators
European heart journal. Case reports
Authors: Yan KL, Lee YJ, Baik AH