Xenotourism and Xenotravel: Some notes on global regulation
(2005) Xenotourism and Xenotravel: Some notes on global regulation. In Proceedings Social Change in the 21st Century, QUT Carseldine, Brisbane.
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Abstract
A Mexican treatment centre currently offers to transplant insulin-producing (islet) cells into people with Type-1 diabetes. The transplantation material is sourced from 'clean' laboratory pigs in an attempt to enable the human patient to produce insulin internally. Using this example, our paper investigates three issues:- 1) The geographical location of this procedure and responses from other parts of world tell us much about technology as a global/local process. We examine to what extent Mexico is understood as an (in)appropriate venue for such a dangerous procedure, and how tropes of global regulation can be used to inhibit or advance technoscientific procedures. 2) Patient compliance has long been a difficult issue for the medical profession. Xenotransplantation is particularly problematic in this regard; not only are there risks for the individual patient, but also there are concerns about trans-species retroviruses against which humans have no known protection. Individual patients are required to balance the compulsion that they manage their health as responsible neo-liberal citizens with the necessity to avoid epidemics. We examine responses to this treatment that oscillate between calls for individual freedom and global regulation. 3) We examine the extent to which medical treatments are increasingly commodified (or connected to leisure broadly conceived). We analyse Mexican xenotransplantation as an example of 'medical tourism', where explicit links are established between medical procedures, holidays, accommodation and other tourist consumption experiences.
| Item Type: | Conference Paper |
|---|---|
| RM Number: | 2006000726 |
| Status: | Published |
| Keywords: | xenotransplantation; xenotourism; medical tourism; healthcare; globalisation; regulation |
| Subjects: | 370000 Studies in Human Society > 370100 Sociology > 370107 Social Change 320000 Medical and Health Sciences > 320200 Immunology > 320205 Transplantation Immunology 300000 Agricultural, Veterinary and Environmental Sciences > 300500 Veterinary Sciences > 300511 Surgery 340000 Economics > 340200 Applied Economics > 340204 Health Economics 320000 Medical and Health Sciences > 321000 Clinical Sciences > 321029 Surgery 350000 Commerce, Management, Tourism and Services > 350500 Tourism > 350501 Tourism Policy and Planning |
| ID Code: | 3449 |
| Deposited By: | Bradbury, Stephanie J |
| Deposited On: | 20 July 2006 |
| Copyright Owner: | Copyright 2005 (The authors) |