Diagnosing Diabetes, Diagnosing Colonialism: An Ethnography of the Classification and Counting of a Senegalese Metabolic Disease

This article explores the top-down production of the statistics frequently circulated in global health. These data must first originate in a place like the public hospital in Saint-Louis, Senegal, in doctor’s offices and laboratories and medical archives. At their root, these data are an accumulatio...

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Main Author: Emma N Bunkley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh Library 2021-08-01
Series:Medicine Anthropology Theory
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/5137
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spelling doaj-1234d3769f9249238b8b8ede0e6abfad2021-08-24T07:46:25ZengUniversity of Edinburgh LibraryMedicine Anthropology Theory2405-691X2021-08-018212610.17157/mat.8.2.51375137Diagnosing Diabetes, Diagnosing Colonialism: An Ethnography of the Classification and Counting of a Senegalese Metabolic DiseaseEmma N Bunkley0University of ArizonaThis article explores the top-down production of the statistics frequently circulated in global health. These data must first originate in a place like the public hospital in Saint-Louis, Senegal, in doctor’s offices and laboratories and medical archives. At their root, these data are an accumulation of individual bodies, experiences, and intimate diagnostic moments. This aggregation turns the afflicted into categories and statistical regimes that shape a global health understanding of diabetes specifically, and noncommunicable diseases broadly. This article explores the individual diabetes diagnostic moment itself and the politics of the current nosology of Type 1 and Type 2, a seemingly neutral dichotomy that belies colonial relationships between Senegal, slavery, sugar production and consumption, and the effects these relationships have on contemporary conceptions of diabetes diagnosis in Senegal and global health.http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/5137senegaldiabetesdiagnosiswomen's health
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emma N Bunkley
spellingShingle Emma N Bunkley
Diagnosing Diabetes, Diagnosing Colonialism: An Ethnography of the Classification and Counting of a Senegalese Metabolic Disease
Medicine Anthropology Theory
senegal
diabetes
diagnosis
women's health
author_facet Emma N Bunkley
author_sort Emma N Bunkley
title Diagnosing Diabetes, Diagnosing Colonialism: An Ethnography of the Classification and Counting of a Senegalese Metabolic Disease
title_short Diagnosing Diabetes, Diagnosing Colonialism: An Ethnography of the Classification and Counting of a Senegalese Metabolic Disease
title_full Diagnosing Diabetes, Diagnosing Colonialism: An Ethnography of the Classification and Counting of a Senegalese Metabolic Disease
title_fullStr Diagnosing Diabetes, Diagnosing Colonialism: An Ethnography of the Classification and Counting of a Senegalese Metabolic Disease
title_full_unstemmed Diagnosing Diabetes, Diagnosing Colonialism: An Ethnography of the Classification and Counting of a Senegalese Metabolic Disease
title_sort diagnosing diabetes, diagnosing colonialism: an ethnography of the classification and counting of a senegalese metabolic disease
publisher University of Edinburgh Library
series Medicine Anthropology Theory
issn 2405-691X
publishDate 2021-08-01
description This article explores the top-down production of the statistics frequently circulated in global health. These data must first originate in a place like the public hospital in Saint-Louis, Senegal, in doctor’s offices and laboratories and medical archives. At their root, these data are an accumulation of individual bodies, experiences, and intimate diagnostic moments. This aggregation turns the afflicted into categories and statistical regimes that shape a global health understanding of diabetes specifically, and noncommunicable diseases broadly. This article explores the individual diabetes diagnostic moment itself and the politics of the current nosology of Type 1 and Type 2, a seemingly neutral dichotomy that belies colonial relationships between Senegal, slavery, sugar production and consumption, and the effects these relationships have on contemporary conceptions of diabetes diagnosis in Senegal and global health.
topic senegal
diabetes
diagnosis
women's health
url http://www.medanthrotheory.org/article/view/5137
work_keys_str_mv AT emmanbunkley diagnosingdiabetesdiagnosingcolonialismanethnographyoftheclassificationandcountingofasenegalesemetabolicdisease
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