
Sweetness in the Blood
Race, Risk, and Type 2 Diabetes
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Narrated by:
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Terrence Kidd
About this listen
Decades of data cannot be ignored: African-American adults are far more likely to develop Type 2 diabetes than white adults. But has science gone so far in racializing diabetes as to undermine the search for solutions? In a rousing indictment of the idea that notions of biological race should drive scientific inquiry, Sweetness in the Blood provides an ethnographic picture of biotechnology's framings of Type 2 diabetes risk and race and, importantly, offers a critical examination of the assumptions behind the recruitment of African American and African-descent populations for Type 2 diabetes research.
James Doucet-Battle begins with a historical overview of how diabetes has been researched and framed racially over the past century, chronicling one company's efforts to recruit African Americans to test their new diabetes risk-score algorithm with the aim of increasing the clinical and market value of the firm's technology. He considers African-American reticence about participation in biomedical research and examines race and health disparities in light of advances in genomic sequencing technology. He concludes by emphasizing that genomic research into sub-Saharan ancestry in fact underlines the importance of analyzing gender before attempting to understand the notion of race. No disease reveals this more than Type 2 diabetes.
©2021 the Regents of the University of Minnesota (P)2021 TantorListeners also enjoyed...
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What listeners say about Sweetness in the Blood
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- Marie G.
- 05-13-22
Dense material. Narration didn't help
I was disappointed with the narration. This is dense, wordy material. Strange pauses in the middle of sentences and mispronounce words ("specicifity" and "dia SPOR a," especially) failed to aid understanding.
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