How work reconfigures an ‘unwanted’ pregnancy into ‘the right tool for the job’ in stem cell research
Autor: | Naomi Pfeffer |
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Rok vydání: | 2009 |
Předmět: |
Tissue and Organ Procurement
Health (social science) Scrutiny Attitude of Health Personnel Health Personnel Abortion Fetal Research Politics Pregnancy Humans Medicine Fetal Stem Cells health care economics and organizations reproductive and urinary physiology Consumer Advocacy business.industry Health Policy Aborted Fetus Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Abortion Induced Public relations Pregnancy Unwanted United Kingdom humanities Work (electrical) Unwanted Pregnancy Law embryonic structures Female Stem cell business Stem Cell Transplantation |
Zdroj: | Sociology of Health & Illness. 31:98-111 |
ISSN: | 1467-9566 0141-9889 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1467-9566.2008.01117.x |
Popis: | Tissue derived from the aborted fetus is considered 'the right tool for the job' in some stem cell laboratories. Relatively little is known of the arrangements in Britain for sourcing aborted fetuses for research purposes. This paper uses data from interviews with stem cell scientists, policy makers, tissue bankers, sponsors of stem cell research, clinicians and nurses, and 'pro-choice' and 'pro-life' activists to reconstruct the work involved in reconfiguring an 'unwanted' pregnancy into a source of fetal stem cells. A close scrutiny of the work allows the politics of collections to emerge. Aborted fetuses undergo a process of decorporealisation that enables scientists to claim them for their professional and economic advantage. The work, however, has consequences for women rhetorically through being reconfigured into a repository of usable fetal tissue, and, in some sites, materially, through alteration in method of abortion. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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