Author(s)
Roberts, Dorothy E.Keywords
Bioethics and Medical EthicsCivil Rights and Discrimination
Health and Medical Administration
Health Law and Policy
Law
Medical Genetics
Medical Jurisprudence
Pharmaceutics and Drug Design
Public Health
Race and Ethnicity
Science and Technology Law
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http://lsr.nellco.org/upenn_wps/446http://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/faculty_scholarship/435
Abstract
This article is based on the 2010 Dienard Memorial Lecture on Law and Medicine at University of Minnesota and part of a larger book project, Fatal Invention: How Science, Politics, and Big Business Re-create Race in the Twenty-first Century (The New Press, 2011). In June 2005, the Food and Drug Administration approved the first pharmaceutical indicated for a specific race. Its racial label elicited three types of criticism – scientific, commercial, and political. I discuss the first two controversies en route to what I consider the main problem with race-based medicine – its political implications. By claiming that race, a political grouping, is important to the marketing of drugs and that race-based drugs can reduce health disparities, which are caused primarily by social inequality, those who promote racialized medicine have made this a political issue. Yet, having made these political claims, these very advocates answer criticism by saying we must put aside social justice concerns in order to improve minority health. This article explains why marketing pharmaceuticals on the basis of race is more likely to worsen racial inequities than cure them.Date
2011-01-01Type
textIdentifier
oai:lsr.nellco.org:upenn_wps-1451http://lsr.nellco.org/upenn_wps/446
http://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/faculty_scholarship/435