Emerging Dilemmas in the Age of Resistance: The Case of Sexually Transmitted Infections
Dados Bibliográficos
AUTOR(ES) | |
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AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) | The University of Sydney, University of Westminster Press, School of Medicine and Dentistry, Griffith University, Sunshine Coast, QLD, Australia, Centre for Social Research in Health, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia, The Kirby Institute, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia |
ANO | Não informado |
TIPO | Artigo |
DOI | 10.1177/10497323241302668 |
ADICIONADO EM | 2025-08-18 |
Resumo
The stage is set for a new era of precariousness in modern medicine, driven by the increasing failure of a key pharmaceutical pillar—antimicrobials. In the context of sexually transmitted infections (STIs), the rise of antimicrobial resistance is introducing urgent questions around what might constitute 'best practice' in a rapidly evolving scene, including the value of asymptomatic screening (test and treat), and the consequent downstream collateral damage emerging from over-use of our diminishingly effective antimicrobial resources. Drawing on interviews with clinicians, experts, and industry representatives, we examine resistance as a site of emerging and co-constitutive moral, temporal, and economic dilemmas. Such dilemmas, as illustrated in participants' accounts, involve complexities regarding prioritization between competing health demands; doing good work while meeting business requirements; considering trade-offs between visibility and amplifying the problem; difficulties balancing presents and futures; reconciling divergent clinical opinions and expertise; and managing patient subjectivities, while considering the implications of clinical practices for resistance. Importantly, centering dilemmas in context of antibiotic-resistant STIs open greater theoretical scope to consider the challenging spaces that key actors such as clinicians and decision-makers occupy, as they attempt to curb resistance while caring for individuals and the community.