缅北强奸 researcher looks at 'hesitancy' to get vaccinated in Barbados
Nicole Charles remembers the qualms that arose when the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination first began to be administered to girls in Canada to protect against strains of a sexually transmitted virus that can cause cervical cancer.
Charles, then an undergraduate student, studied the immunization program and the reactions that parents had to it for a research paper that she wrote as she was completing her bachelor鈥檚 degree. The HPV vaccine would also become the focus of her master鈥檚 work, and it similarly was the topic of her PhD dissertation.
鈥淚t was a research question that emerged from a personal experience,鈥 says Charles (pictured left), an assistant professor in the at 缅北强奸 Mississauga. She has continued to study the HPV vaccine and the phenomenon of vaccine hesitancy by carrying out ethnographic research on ambivalence toward the HPV vaccine among parents in Barbados. The country has rolled out its own vaccination program over the last four years.
The findings are the topic of a book she is writing, Suspicion: Vaccines, Hesitancy and the Affective Politics of Protection in Barbados, which explores the complex issues surrounding resistance to the HPV vaccine in the Caribbean country.
鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 all about language,鈥 says Charles, who came to 缅北强奸 Mississauga last year. 鈥淚 am not documenting why people are hesitant to the vaccine but that they鈥檙e hesitant, how they express it and what that means.鈥
Charles was born in Canada, grew up in Trinidad & Tobago and returned here for university. She says the 鈥渟eedlings for this research topic were planted鈥 when she saw that her own mother was 鈥渦nable to articulate what was unnerving for her鈥 about the HPV vaccination program back in 2006, when the vaccine was introduced. 鈥淪he encouraged me to look closer into the vaccine and its merits and write one of my course research papers on the topic,鈥 says Charles.
The subject would occupy Charles for the next dozen years. She chose Barbados as a field site for her current study because, in 2014, it was the most recent Caribbean country to introduce the HPV vaccine through a national program. 鈥淭he topic was very much at the forefront of the citizenry鈥檚 consciousness.鈥
She says her research showed that Barbadian parents鈥 suspicions about the vaccine went beyond scientific ignorance or cultural taboos around sex. 鈥淪uspicion instead, I argue, is something more ambiguous and affective,鈥 she says, based on feelings and emotions.
She notes that the issue has 鈥渕ultiple layers.鈥 For example, the Anglophone Caribbean is shaped by the legacies of slavery and colonialism. At the same time, Barbados and much of the region has a disproportionately high burden of HPV, and some of the highest incidences of cervical cancer in the Americas. She says public health practitioners looking to tailor their messages and improve the vaccination rate 鈥渕ight more carefully rethink the ways in which technologies like the HPV vaccine are promoted, in light of the specificities and histories of the region.鈥
Charles says the goal of her research is to 鈥渂ring issues of suspicion and refusal to light,鈥 and it does not extend to vaccination hesitancy in general. 鈥淭his conversation has to be had in specific locales in relation to specific vaccines.鈥
She鈥檚 currently in conversation with book publishers. Meanwhile, she鈥檚 working on a new project that looks at the cultural politics of race, sugar, food, diabetes and hypertension in post-colonial Barbados.