• Title of article

    Market incentives, human lives, and AIDS vaccines

  • Author/Authors

    Susan Craddock، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    1042
  • To page
    1056
  • Abstract
    For many, an AIDS vaccine holds the promise of intervening in a widespread epidemic because it is not predicated on changing economic structures and social contexts underlying vulnerability to HIV for millions of individuals. Yet 20 years into the AIDS epidemic, there is still no vaccine. Based on interviews of AIDS vaccine researchers, watchdog organizations, and ethics groups from the United States, South Africa, and Kenya conducted between August and December of 2003, this paper explores possible answers to the question of why there is no vaccine, looking in particular at contradictions between a biomedical research industry increasingly driven by market incentives and a disease that primarily affects individuals living in low-income countries with little vaccine purchasing power. Producing a vaccine that could be effective in low-income regions requires new kinds of initiatives that can coordinate research nationally and globally, and circumvent current regulatory mechanisms that dictate against the development and dissemination of low-profit medical technologies. Until such initiatives are supported, however, vaccine research will continue at a devastatingly slow pace at the cost of millions of lives annually.
  • Keywords
    Medical capitalism , USA , Africa , Biomedical research , AIDS vaccine , Pharmaceutical
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Social Science and Medicine
  • Record number

    603271