Abstract
Making use of a comparative perspective on the emergence of ‘breast cancer genetics’ in the different cultural context of the UK and Cuba, this article examines the tensions between the modern promise of genomics as personalised medicine and a commitment to public health. Focusing primarily on the Cuba context and drawing on ethnographic research as part of a collaborative project working with genetic professionals and publics, the article examines the particular technologies, identities and socialities at stake in an emerging and evolving field of genetic medicine. It highlights how long-standing continuities in the commitment to the equitable provision of public health, particularly as this relates to ‘family medicine’, are central to understanding the scope and expansion of ‘community genetics’ interventions, even when at the level of local practice, public health is also now subject to the unequal dynamics of economic necessity through the working out of ‘lo informal’. Illuminating the different ways agency, risk, responsibility, citizenship and activism get configured by and between publics and health professionals in Cuba, the article reveals the challenges and opportunities posed by predictive genomic medicine in relation to the dynamic and shifting terrain of public health.
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