TY - JOUR
T1 - Implications of Racial/Ethnic Classification in the Hungarian Post-Genomic Medical Discourse
AU - Szamosi, Barna
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Institute for Ethnic Studies. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Racial/ethnic categorization in medicine presents challenges for clinicians and patients alike. Challenges arise because racial/ethnic identities do not match with objective biological traits, and at the same time, these identities do have medical consequences in a racially and ethnically stratified society. Three major epistemological approaches – biological realism, eliminativism, and constructivism – dominate scientific theorization on the consequences of racial/ethnic categorization in medicine. In this paper, I present a case study of Hungarian medical genetic discourse that focuses on the possible applications of race/ ethnicity regarding Roma and non-Roma patients. In applying the methods of constructivist grounded theory, I recorded and analysed 34 expert interviews with human geneticists between 2011 and 2015. In this paper, I argue that the constructivist understanding of medical diagnoses must be complemented with materialist sensitivity, thus making sense of the contingent nature of race/ethnicity as factors that contribute to medical understanding.
AB - Racial/ethnic categorization in medicine presents challenges for clinicians and patients alike. Challenges arise because racial/ethnic identities do not match with objective biological traits, and at the same time, these identities do have medical consequences in a racially and ethnically stratified society. Three major epistemological approaches – biological realism, eliminativism, and constructivism – dominate scientific theorization on the consequences of racial/ethnic categorization in medicine. In this paper, I present a case study of Hungarian medical genetic discourse that focuses on the possible applications of race/ ethnicity regarding Roma and non-Roma patients. In applying the methods of constructivist grounded theory, I recorded and analysed 34 expert interviews with human geneticists between 2011 and 2015. In this paper, I argue that the constructivist understanding of medical diagnoses must be complemented with materialist sensitivity, thus making sense of the contingent nature of race/ethnicity as factors that contribute to medical understanding.
KW - Roma
KW - ethnicity
KW - health equality
KW - medical genetics
KW - race
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85134717833&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.36144/RiG88.jun22.113-132
DO - 10.36144/RiG88.jun22.113-132
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85134717833
SN - 0354-0286
SP - 113
EP - 132
JO - Treatises and Documents, Journal of Ethnic Studies
JF - Treatises and Documents, Journal of Ethnic Studies
IS - 88
ER -