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      Aligning in the dark: Variable and shifting (user-) settings in developing point-of-care diagnostics for tuberculosis and HIV

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      Social Studies of Science
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          To be effective, healthcare technologies should be attuned to particular contexts of use. This article examines how such attuning is articulated in global innovation practices for tuberculosis and HIV diagnostics, and to what effect. It examines the development of point-of-care (POC) diagnostics – promised to be designed for users outside laboratories or in resource constrained settings – to study what developers and implementers do to align diagnostic technologies to the POC. Fieldwork among global health actors involved in diagnostic development, including manufacturers, donors, industry consultants, international organizations, policymakers, regulators and researchers, is combined with fieldwork among users of diagnostics in India, including decision-makers, NGOs, program officers, laboratory technicians and nurses. The article adds to STS’s theory of alignment and user interaction, where the setting and user to which developers and implementers of global health diagnostics align are multiple, varied, emerging and keep shifting. The characteristics of a local user setting include multiple engaged and imagined user settings, but also the settings of developers, of global intermediaries, competitors and diseases. As such, alignment is happening across multiple dimensions and scales and has an important temporal dimension. The results reveal how alignment happens to some extent in the dark, characterized by uncertainty about the elements that should align. Standardizing elements, politics and scarce resources cause frictions in the temporalities of aligning and over what constitutes a well-aligned diagnostic.

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          Most cited references10

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          Impure Science – AIDS, Activism and the Politics of Knowledge

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            Scrambling for Africa : AIDS, Expertise, and the Rise of American Global Health Science

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              Of Bicycles, bakelites, and bulbs: toward a theory of sociotechnical change.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Social Studies of Science
                Soc Stud Sci
                SAGE Publications
                0306-3127
                1460-3659
                February 2020
                January 13 2020
                February 2020
                : 50
                : 1
                : 50-75
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Health, Ethics & Society and Care and Public Health Research Institute, Maastricht University, The Netherlands
                Article
                10.1177/0306312719900545
                31928147
                3465ead2-1ea2-43a0-b073-f87d66e727bf
                © 2020

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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