Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Precarious ethics: Toxicology research among self-poisoning hospital admissions in Sri Lanka.

Sariola, S.; Simpson, B.

Authors

S. Sariola



Abstract

Self-harm using poison is a serious public health problem across Asia. As part of a broader effort to tackle this problem, medical research involving randomised clinical trials are used to identify effective antidotes among patients who have ingested poison. On the basis of ethnographic material collected in rural hospitals in Sri Lanka between 2008 and 2009, this article describes the conduct of trials in this unusual and difficult context. It outlines three subject positions crucial to understanding the complexity of such trials. At one level, self-poisoning admissions might be thought of as abjects, that is, stigmatised by actions that have placed them at the very limits of physical and social life. They have seriously harmed themselves in an act that often leads to death, marking the act as a suicide. Yet, this is the point when they are recruited into trials and become objects of research and experimentation. Participation in experimental research accords them particular rights mandated in international ethical guidelines for human subject research. Here the inexorable logic of trials and morality of care meet in circumstances of dire emergency.

Citation

Sariola, S., & Simpson, B. (2013). Precarious ethics: Toxicology research among self-poisoning hospital admissions in Sri Lanka. BioSocieties, 8(1), 41-57. https://doi.org/10.1057/biosoc.2012.34

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Jan 7, 2013
Publication Date 2013-03
Deposit Date Nov 18, 2011
Journal BioSocieties
Print ISSN 1745-8552
Electronic ISSN 1745-8560
Publisher Palgrave Macmillan
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 8
Issue 1
Pages 41-57
DOI https://doi.org/10.1057/biosoc.2012.34
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1503343