Tracing medical risk rhetoric from regulatory database to clinical judgment – an interview and protocol study

    Activity: Talk or presentation typesLecture and oral contribution

    Description

    The risk-benefit balance of a drug is never finalized, and new risks may emerge after the drug has been approved for use. Making such emergent risks matter in patient care is difficult, however. In the process of transforming a pharmacoepidemiological signal to practical knowledge in patient care, information about an emergent risk travels through different regulatory, scientific and clinical contexts and cuts across the multiple ontologies of a medical product. Based on empirical studies of how drug manufacturers and regulators cooperate to produce warning letters to physicians and how physicians read and react to such a letter, this talk traces a genre of risk rhetoric to describe the transformation that emergent risk knowledge undergoes and the networks that assemble around it.
    Period26 Apr 2019
    Held atUniversity of British Columbia, Science and Technology Studies Graduate Program, Canada
    Degree of RecognitionInternational