From ‘Me’ to ‘Us’: solidarity and biocitizenship in the Brazilian cancer precision medicine innovation system

Autores/as

Palabras clave:

Science, technology and society. Technological development and innovation projects. Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Type 2. Solidarity. Brazil.

Resumen

As biotechnology innovations move from the bench to the bedside and, recently, also to the Internet, a myriad of emanating challenges and potentials may rise under distinct sociocultural and political economic contexts. Using a grounded-theory-inspired case study focused on the Brazilian research consortium for Medullary Endocrine Neoplasia type 2 (BrasMEN2) – an inherited syndrome where genetic tests define cost-effective interventions – we outline facilitators and barriers to both development and implementation of a ‘public health genomics’ strategy under a developing country scenario. From participant observation and interview data with all who hold an interest in MEN2 around Brazil, Part I discusses how a ‘solidarity’-based motivation for individual and collective ‘biocitizenship’ is driving people’s pre-emptive actions for accessing and making personalised healthcare available at Brazil’s Unified Health System (SUS) via the ‘co-production’ of science, technology and the culture for precision medicine – termed Brazil’s ‘hidden’ biomedical innovation system. Given the establishment of BrasMEN as ‘solidarity networks’ – promoting and supporting the cancer precision medicine’s rationale – Part II illustrates how a series of new bioethical challenges raise from such engagement with familial cancer genomics under Brazil’s developing country scenario and how this social/soft technology constitute a solution for Euro/North American societies.

Biografía del autor/a

Dante Marcello Claramonte Gallian, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (Unifesp)

Director, Centre for History and Philosophy of the Health Sciences, Escola Paulista de Medicina, Federal University of São Paulo, Brazil. Dr. Gallian is Senior Lecturer in History of Medicine and has published in the areas of Humanities in Health and Oral Life History and Narratives in Health, Spirituality & Health.

Rui Monteiro de Barros Maciel, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (Unifesp)

Professor of Medicine and Director, Laboratory of Molecular and Translational Endocrinology, Division of Endocrinology, Department of Medicine, Escola Paulista de Medicina, Federal University of São Paulo. Dr. Maciel’s publications include more than 200 papers in the areas of thyroid hormone metabolism and cell biology/molecular aspects of thyroid diseases, particularly thyroid cancer.

Descargas

Publicado

2020-01-17

Cómo citar

1.
Sousa MSA de, Gallian DMC, Maciel RM de B. From ‘Me’ to ‘Us’: solidarity and biocitizenship in the Brazilian cancer precision medicine innovation system. Saúde debate [Internet]. 17 de enero de 2020 [citado 10 de junio de 2025];43(especial 2 nov):114-32. Disponible en: https://revista.saudeemdebate.org.br/sed/article/view/2563