Project Duration: 2024 - 2026
This project examines the social and cultural implications of recent advances in biomedical research and clinical practice relating to the human metabolism. These advances underscore the complexity and malleability of metabolisms and in fact expand the conception of it to include more than individual and more than human realities. Using qualitative methods, we examine how the metabolism of people living with Type 1 diabetes (Study 1) and obesity (Study 2) and on home parenteral nutrition (Study 3) is done in medical and (collective) self-care practices. We focus on the role of new wearable technologies, (self-)experimentation with diet, personalised nutrition, probiotics, and the new generation of metabolic drugs. We conceptualise these matters as mediators (Latour 2007) that extend the metabolism beyond the human gut. The project will be implemented in cooperation with the Centre for Research on Nutrition, Metabolism and Diabetes at Charles University. The team will design and pilot the use of a method we call ‘biosocial casuistics’ that will combine sociological and clinical data.
Principal Investigator:
Members of the project team:
Themes:
Sociology of Sciences, Public health
Contracting authority:
Grant Agency of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Department:
Related Publications:
“This doctor knows shit about you, but the first thing he says is, ‘you need to lose some weight’”: Anti-fat bias and the contradictory effects of fat medicalization in Czech healthcare
Topics: pece, zdravi, zivotnistyl
Publication Type: impaktovanyclanek
Department: National Contact Centre for Gender & Science