LIKE A SEDIMENT THAT STAYS IN THE BODY: SOCIAL PERCEPTION ON PERSISTENT TOXIC SUBSTANCES AND OTHER SYNTHETIC CHEMICAL SUBSTANCES IN FOOD AMONG PREGNANT AND BREASTFEEDING WOMEN IN SPAIN

AIBR-REVISTA DE ANTROPOLOGIA IBEROAMERICANA(2019)

Cited 3|Views10
No score
Abstract
This paper analyzes the ways in which pregnant and breastfeeding women perceive the presence of chemical substances in food products. It also deals with how they reflect on the effects of those substances on their own health and that of the baby and the foetus when they think about processes of accumulation, transmission and elimination of those substances inside their bodies. Our first hypothesis is that women's discourses about the health effects of Persistent Toxic Substances (PTS) is related to the social distance of the social actors that reproduce these discourses. The acceptability of these discourses is more evident the greater is the trust in the social actors who transmit this information. This paper analyzes the discourses of health workers and the close social environment of these women, since both play an essential role in the transmission of these discourses. Despite the fact that the dietary advice received by women is strongly medicalized, the information provided on chemical substances in food in the medical environment is scarce and not homogeneous. Thus, this type of risk is made invisible in the doctor-patient relationship, and the responsibility for managing it usually falls on women.
More
Translated text
Key words
Social perception of risk,internal contamination,Persistent Toxic Substances,pregnant and breastfeeding women,defenselessness
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined