Academic literature on the topic 'Pap test Victoria'

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Journal articles on the topic "Pap test Victoria"

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McLachlan, E., S. Anderson, D. Hawkes, M. Saville, and K. Arabena. "Completing the cervical screening pathway: Factors that facilitate the increase of self-collection uptake among under-screened and never-screened women, an Australian pilot study." Current Oncology 25, no. 1 (February 28, 2018): 17. http://dx.doi.org/10.3747/co.25.3916.

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Objectives To examine factors that enhance under-screened and never-screened women’s completion of the self collection alternative pathway of the Renewed National Cervical Screening Program (ncsp) in Victoria, Australia.Background With the Australian ncsp changing, starting on 1 December 2017, the Medical Services Advisory Committee (msac) recommended implementing human papillomavirus (hpv) testing using a self-collected sample for under-screened and never-screened populations. In response, a multi-agency group implemented an hpv self collection pilot project to trial self-collection screening pathways for eligible women.Methods Quantitative data were collected on participation rates and compliance rates with follow-up procedures across three primary health care settings. Forty women who self-collected were interviewed in a semi-structured format, and seven agency staff completed in-depth interviews. Qualitative data were used to identify and understand clinical and personal enablers that assisted women to complete self-collection cervical screening pathways successfully.Results Eighty-five per cent (10 women) of participants who tested positive for hpv successfully received their results and completed follow-up procedures as required. Two remaining participants also received hpvpositive results. However, agencies were unable to engage them in follow-up services and procedures. The overall participation rate in screening (self-collection or Pap test) was 85.7% (84 women), with 79 women self-collecting. Qualitative data indicated that clear explanations on self-collection, development of trusting, empathetic relationships with health professionals, and recognition of participants’ past experiences were critical to the successful completion of the self-collection pathway. When asked about possible inhibitors to screening and to following up on results and appointments, women cited poor physical and mental health, as well as financial and other structural barriers.Conclusion A well-implemented process, led by trusted, knowledgeable, and engaged health care professionals who can provide appropriate support and information, can assist under-screened and never-screened women to complete the hpv self-collection pathway successfully.
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Sultana, Farhana, Robyn Mullins, Michael Murphy, Dallas R. English, Julie A. Simpson, Kelly T. Drennan, Stella Heley, et al. "Women’s views on human papillomavirus self-sampling: focus groups to assess acceptability, invitation letters and a test kit in the Australian setting." Sexual Health 12, no. 4 (2015): 279. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sh14236.

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Background The study evaluated acceptability, invitation letters and the test kit for a trial of human papillomavirus (HPV) self-sampling among never- and under-screened women in Australia. Methods: Victorian women, 30–69 years, who had never had a Pap test or were overdue for one, participated. Four focus groups including eight to nine participants segmented by age (30–49 and 50–69 years) and screening history (never- and under-screened) were conducted in August 2013. Discussions were recorded and transcribed verbatim and data analysed using thematic content analysis. Results: The response to the concept of HPV self-sampling was positive. Decision-making was largely influenced by the content of a pre-invitation letter. Appealing features of self-sampling were cost (free), convenience (home-based) and anticipated less discomfort (with a swab) than a Pap test. Small kits that fit in mailboxes were preferred over post office parcel collection. The perceived barriers include concerns about test accuracy and lack of confidence that a home-based test would give the same results as a physician administered test. Women wanted information on the timing of receipt of the results and information about the organisation providing the test. Conclusion: HPV self-sampling is a possible alternative for Australian women who are reluctant to have a Pap test and may increase the likelihood of participation in cervical cancer screening if women’s concerns about it can be addressed. The findings of this study are relevant for researchers, policymakers and practitioners implementing self-sampling for under-screened women as part of cervical screening programs.
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Hocking, Jane S., Megan S. C. Lim, Janaki Vidanapathirana, Tim R. H. Read, and Margaret Hellard. "Chlamydia testing in general practice - a survey of Victorian general practitioners." Sexual Health 3, no. 4 (2006): 241. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/sh06042.

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Background: To assess the current chlamydia testing practices of Victorian general practitioners (GPs). Methods: GPs were randomly selected from the Australasian Medical Publishing Company’s national database of medical practitioners and mailed a letter of invitation asking them to complete a postal survey. Up to three postal reminders were sent to non-responders. Results: Of 421 eligible GPs, 252 (60%) returned a completed survey; 22.9% (95% CI: 17.8%, 28.6%) reported testing at least some asymptomatic patients for chlamydia each week and 26.8% (95% CI: 21.4%, 32.7%) reported that they presumptively treated patients for chlamydia without testing them at least half the time. The majority knew the appropriate specimens for diagnosing chlamydia, but 6–8% thought blood and 6% indicated that the Pap smear could be used to reliably diagnose chlamydia infection. Conclusions: These findings have implications for the future chlamydia screening pilot program in Australia and indicate that a comprehensive education program will be necessary to inform GPs and equip them with the skills to appropriately test for chlamydia in their practice.
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Hoit, G., C. Hinkewich, J. Tiao, V. Porgo, L. Moore, L. Moore, J. Tiao, et al. "Trauma Association of Canada (TAC) Annual Scientific Meeting. The Westin Whistler Resort & Spa, Whistler, BC, Thursday, Apr. 11 to Saturday, Apr. 13, 2013Testing the reliability of tools for pediatric trauma teamwork evaluation in a North American high-resource simulation settingThe association of etomidate with mortality in trauma patientsDefinition of isolated hip fractures as an exclusion criterion in trauma centre performance evaluations: a systematic reviewEstimation of acute care hospitalization costs for trauma hospital performance evaluation: a systematic reviewHospital length of stay following admission for traumatic injury in Canada: a multicentre cohort studyPredictors of hospital length of stay following traumatic injury: a multicentre cohort studyInfluence of the heterogeneity in definitions of an isolated hip fracture used as an exclusion criterion in trauma centre performance evaluations: a multicentre cohort studyPediatric trauma, advocacy skills and medical studentsCompliance with the prescribed packed red blood cell, fresh frozen plasma and platelet ratio for the trauma transfusion pathway at a level 1 trauma centreEarly fixed-wing aircraft activation for major trauma in remote areasDevelopment of a national, multi-disciplinary trauma crisis resource management curriculum: results from the pilot courseThe management of blunt hepatic trauma in the age of angioembolization: a single centre experienceEarly predictors of in-hospital mortality in adult trauma patientsThe impact of open tibial fracture on health service utilization in the year preceding and following injuryA systematic review and meta-analysis of the efficacy of red blood cell transfusion in the trauma populationSources of support for paramedics managing work-related stress in a Canadian EMS service responding to multisystem trauma patientsAnalysis of prehospital treatment of pain in the multisystem trauma patient at a community level 2 trauma centreIncreased mortality associated with placement of central lines during trauma resuscitationChronic pain after serious injury — identifying high risk patientsEpidemiology of in-hospital trauma deaths in a Brazilian university teaching hospitalIncreased suicidality following major trauma: a population-based studyDevelopment of a population-wide record linkage system to support trauma researchInduction of hmgb1 by increased gut permeability mediates acute lung injury in a hemorrhagic shock and resuscitation mouse modelPatients who sustain gunshot pelvic fractures are at increased risk for deep abscess formation: aggravated by rectal injuryAre we transfusing more with conservative management of isolated blunt splenic injury? A retrospective studyMotorcycle clothesline injury prevention: Experimental test of a protective deviceA prospective analysis of compliance with a massive transfusion protocol - activation alone is not enoughAn evaluation of diagnostic modalities in penetrating injuries to the cardiac box: Is there a role for routine echocardiography in the setting of negative pericardial FAST?Achievement of pediatric national quality indicators — an institutional report cardProcess mapping trauma care in 2 regional health authorities in British Columbia: a tool to assist trauma sys tem design and evaluationPatient safety checklist for emergency intubation: a systematic reviewA standardized flow sheet improves pediatric trauma documentationMassive transfusion in pediatric trauma: a 5-year retrospective reviewIs more better: Does a more intensive physiotherapy program result in accelerated recovery for trauma patients?Trauma care: not just for surgeons. Initial impact of implementing a dedicated multidisciplinary trauma team on severely injured patientsThe role of postmortem autopsy in modern trauma care: Do we still need them?Prototype cervical spine traction device for reduction stabilization and transport of nondistraction type cervical spine injuriesGoing beyond organ preservation: a 12-year review of the beneficial effects of a nonoperative management algorithm for splenic traumaAssessing the construct validity of a global disability measure in adult trauma registry patientsThe mactrauma TTL assessment tool: developing a novel tool for assessing performance of trauma traineesA quality improvement approach to developing a standardized reporting format of ct findings in blunt splenic injuriesOutcomes in geriatric trauma: what really mattersFresh whole blood is not better than component therapy (FFP:RBC) in hemorrhagic shock: a thromboelastometric study in a small animal modelFactors affecting mortality of chest trauma patients: a prospective studyLong-term pain prevalence and health related quality of life outcomes for patients enrolled in a ketamine versus morphine for prehospital traumatic pain randomized controlled trialDescribing pain following trauma: predictors of persistent pain and pain prevalenceManagement strategies for hemorrhage due to pelvic trauma: a survey of Canadian general surgeonsMajor trauma follow-up clinic: Patient perception of recovery following severe traumaLost opportunities to enhance trauma practice: culture of interprofessional education and sharing among emergency staffPrehospital airway management in major trauma and traumatic brain injury by critical care paramedicsImproving patient selection for angiography and identifying risk of rebleeding after angioembolization in the nonoperative management of high grade splenic injuriesFactors predicting the need for angioembolization in solid organ injuryProthrombin complex concentrates use in traumatic brain injury patients on oral anticoagulants is effective despite underutilizationThe right treatment at the right time in the right place: early results and associations from the introduction of an all-inclusive provincial trauma care systemA multicentre study of patient experiences with acute and postacute injury carePopulation burden of major trauma: Has introduction of an organized trauma system made a difference?Long-term functional and return to work outcomes following blunt major trauma in Victoria, AustraliaSurgical dilemma in major burns victim: heterotopic ossification of the tempromandibular jointWhich radiological modality to choose in a unique penetrating neck injury: a differing opinionThe Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) program in CanadaThe Rural Trauma Team Development Course (RTTDC) in Pakistan: Is there a role?Novel deployment of BC mobile medical unit for coverage of BMX world cup sporting eventIncidence and prevalence of intra-abdominal hypertension and abdominal compartment syndrome in critically ill adults: a systematic review and meta-analysisRisk factors for intra-abdominal hypertension and abdominal compartment syndrome in critically ill or injured adults: a systematic review and meta-analysisA comparison of quality improvement practices at adult and pediatric trauma centresInternational trauma centre survey to evaluate content validity, usability and feasibility of quality indicatorsLong-term functional recovery following decompressive craniectomy for severe traumatic brain injuryMorbidity and mortality associated with free falls from a height among teenage patients: a 5-year review from a level 1 trauma centreA comparison of adverse events between trauma patients and general surgery patients in a level 1 trauma centreProcoagulation, anticoagulation and fibrinolysis in severely bleeding trauma patients: a laboratorial characterization of the early trauma coagulopathyThe use of mobile technology to facilitate surveillance and improve injury outcome in sport and physical activityIntegrated knowledge translation for injury quality improvement: a partnership between researchers and knowledge usersThe impact of a prevention project in trauma with young and their learningIntraosseus vascular access in adult trauma patients: a systematic reviewThematic analysis of patient reported experiences with acute and post-acute injury careAn evaluation of a world health organization trauma care checklist quality improvement pilot programProspective validation of the modified pediatric trauma triage toolThe 16-year evolution of a Canadian level 1 trauma centre: growing up, growing out, and the impact of a booming economyA 20-year review of trauma related literature: What have we done and where are we going?Management of traumatic flail chest: a systematic review of the literatureOperative versus nonoperative management of flail chestEmergency department performance of a clinically indicated and technically successful emergency department thoracotomy and pericardiotomy with minimal equipment in a New Zealand institution without specialized surgical backupBritish Columbia’s mobile medical unit — an emergency health care support resourceRoutine versus ad hoc screening for acute stress: Who would benefit and what are the opportunities for trauma care?A geographical analysis of the Early Development Instrument (EDI) and childhood injuryDevelopment of a pediatric spinal cord injury nursing course“Kids die in driveways” — an injury prevention campaignEpidemiology of traumatic spine injuries in childrenA collaborative approach to reducing injuries in New Brunswick: acute care and injury preventionImpact of changes to a provincial field trauma triage tool in New BrunswickEnsuring quality of field trauma triage in New BrunswickBenefits of a provincial trauma transfer referral system: beyond the numbersThe field trauma triage landscape in New BrunswickImpact of the Rural Trauma Team Development Course (RTTDC) on trauma transfer intervals in a provincial, inclusive trauma systemTrauma and stress: a critical dynamics study of burnout in trauma centre healthcare professionalsUltrasound-guided pediatric forearm fracture reduction with sedation in the emergency departmentBlock first, opiates later? The use of the fascia iliaca block for patients with hip fractures in the emergency department: a systematic reviewRural trauma systems — demographic and survival analysis of remote traumas transferred from northern QuebecSimulation in trauma ultrasound trainingIncidence of clinically significant intra-abdominal injuries in stable blunt trauma patientsWake up: head injury management around the clockDamage control laparotomy for combat casualties in forward surgical facilitiesDetection of soft tissue foreign bodies by nurse practitioner performed ultrasoundAntihypertensive medications and walking devices are associated with falls from standingThe transfer process: perspectives of transferring physiciansDevelopment of a rodent model for the study of abdominal compartment syndromeClinical efficacy of routine repeat head computed tomography in pediatric traumatic brain injuryEarly warning scores (EWS) in trauma: assessing the “effectiveness” of interventions by a rural ground transport service in the interior of British ColumbiaAccuracy of trauma patient transfer documentation in BCPostoperative echocardiogram after penetrating cardiac injuries: a retrospective studyLoss to follow-up in trauma studies comparing operative methods: a systematic reviewWhat matters where and to whom: a survey of experts on the Canadian pediatric trauma systemA quality initiative to enhance pain management for trauma patients: baseline attitudes of practitionersComparison of rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM) values in massive and nonmassive transfusion patientsMild traumatic brain injury defined by GCS: Is it really mild?The CMAC videolaryngosocpe is superior to the glidescope for the intubation of trauma patients: a prospective analysisInjury patterns and outcome of urban versus suburban major traumaA cost-effective, readily accessible technique for progressive abdominal closureEvolution and impact of the use of pan-CT scan in a tertiary urban trauma centre: a 4-year auditAdditional and repeated CT scan in interfacilities trauma transfers: room for standardizationPediatric trauma in situ simulation facilitates identification and resolution of system issuesHospital code orange plan: there’s an app for thatDiaphragmatic rupture from blunt trauma: an NTDB studyEarly closure of open abdomen using component separation techniqueSurgical fixation versus nonoperative management of flail chest: a meta-analysisIntegration of intraoperative angiography as part of damage control surgery in major traumaMass casualty preparedness of regional trauma systems: recommendations for an evaluative frameworkDiagnostic peritoneal aspirate: An obsolete diagnostic modality?Blunt hollow viscus injury: the frequency and consequences of delayed diagnosis in the era of selective nonoperative managementEnding “double jeopardy:” the diagnostic impact of cardiac ultrasound and chest radiography on operative sequencing in penetrating thoracoabdominal traumaAre trauma patients with hyperfibrinolysis diagnosed by rotem salvageable?The risk of cardiac injury after penetrating thoracic trauma: Which is the better predictor, hemodynamic status or pericardial window?The online Concussion Awareness Training Toolkit for health practitioners (CATT): a new resource for recognizing, treating, and managing concussionThe prevention of concussion and brain injury in child and youth team sportsRandomized controlled trial of an early rehabilitation intervention to improve return to work Rates following road traumaPhone call follow-upPericardiocentesis in trauma: a systematic review." Canadian Journal of Surgery 56, no. 2 Suppl (April 2013): S1—S42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1503/cjs.005813.

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Hashimura, Hikaru, Jinbo Hu, Hiroki Kobayashi, Stella May Gwini, Jimmy Shen, Nicholas Y. N. Chee, James C. G. Doery, et al. "Saline suppression to distinguish the primary aldosteronism subtype: a diagnostic study." European Journal of Endocrinology 188, no. 1 (January 10, 2023). http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ejendo/lvac003.

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Abstract Objectives The saline suppression test (SST) serves to confirm the diagnosis of primary aldosteronism (PA), while adrenal vein sampling (AVS) is used to subtype PA as unilateral or bilateral. Criteria that can accurately identify those with bilateral PA based on SST results could reduce the need for AVS. We previously demonstrated that a combination of plasma aldosterone concentration (PAC) < 300 pmol L−1 and a reduction in aldosterone-to-renin ratio (ARR) following recumbent SST had high specificity for predicting bilateral PA in an Australian cohort of 92 patients with PA who have undergone AVS. We sought to validate our predictive criteria in larger, independent cohorts of patients with PA. Design An international, multi-centre cohort study. Methods Data from 55 patients at Monash Health, Victoria, Australia, 106 patients from the First Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, China, and 105 patients from Nihon University Itabashi Hospital, Japan were analysed. Results A combination of PAC <300 pmol L−1 and a reduction in ARR following recumbent SST predicted bilateral PA with specificities of 88.2%, 97.0%, and 100.0% in Australian, Chinese, and Japanese cohorts, respectively. This criterion could allow 22%–38% of patients with PA to bypass AVS and proceed directly to medical treatment. Conclusion In patients undergoing the recumbent SST, a post-saline PAC <300 pmol L−1 together with a reduction in ARR can predict bilateral PA with high specificity and may allow targeted treatment to be commenced without AVS in up to a third of patients.
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Ferreira, Arthur Arruda Leal, Marcus Vinícius do Amaral Gama Santos, Mateus Thomaz Bayer, Raphael Thomas Pegden, and Heliana De Barros Conde Rodrigues. "Editorial." Mnemosine 17, no. 2 (September 13, 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.12957/mnemosine.2021.62166.

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Apresentação do Dossiê - Biopolítica: a proliferação de um conceito raroO conceito de biopolítica tem sua estreia em 1974 em terras brasileiras, em conferência no Instituto de Medicina Social da UERJ (FOUCAULT, 1981 [1974]); desponta no início de 1976 em duplo nascimento, na conclusão da História da Sexualidade (FOUCAULT, 1988 [1976]) e do curso Em defesa da sociedade (2010 [1975-1976]) e praticamente desaparece no início de 1978 no curso Segurança, Território, População (FOUCAULT, 2006b [1977-1978]), tendo seu réquiem em 1979 no curso Nascimento da Biopolítica (FOUCAULT, 1997 [1979]; 2007 [1978-1979]). Apesar da sua curta existência e dos rápidos trânsitos de sentido em sua breve passagem, este conceito se tornou crucial nas diversas leituras que fazemos hoje em dia do legado de Foucault. Este conceito se tornou chave em vários domínios, sendo utilizado ainda nos dias de hoje por vários autores na abordagem dos mais variados fenômenos: da existência das ciências humanas e médicas, passando pela medicalização e chegando às pandemias recentes (para este último caso, cf. Tirado et alii, 2012; 2015).Cada vez mais em certos campos, como na Psicologia, é quase imediata a associação de Foucault ao conceito de biopolítica (seguramente tema dos mais diversos trabalhos e derivados). Ainda que a criação do neologismo não seja sua (de acordo com Esposito, 2011), é com este autor que o conceito tem seu máximo reconhecimento. Teses, dissertações, monografias e uma enorme quantidade de artigos, coletâneas e livros de comentadores carregam esse conceito como marco central do trabalho do pensador francês. Numa rápida consulta ao Google, ao acionarmos o item “Biopolítica”, são disparados mais de 641000 resultados imediatos. Igualmente importantes são as apropriações pelas quais esse conceito passou com outros pensadores, como Gilles Deleuze (1992), Nikolas Rose (2011), Giorgio Agamben (2002), Peter Pal Pelbart (2003), Achille Mbembe (2018), Byung-Chul-Han (2018) e Roberto Esposito (2011): sociedade de controle, molecularidade, vida nua, biopotência, necropolítica, psicopolítica, bíos - todos esses conceitos têm alguma derivação da proposta de biopolítica.Diante desta enorme expansão, o que dizer mais da biopolítica? O esforço aqui seria tentar ampliar ainda mais sua virtualidade, ao abrir outras leituras no campo da loucura (Raphael Pegden e os códigos penais no Brasil; Victoria Sedkowski e uma análise do Hospital Mental de Barcelona), de novos temas (o Self Científico com Diego Gonzales e Francisco Tirado; o Panoptismo de Gotham com Daniel Salvador e Iván Moreno Sanchez), na relação com interlocutores (Ricardo George e o diálogo com Hanna Arendt) e no entendimento da própria biopolítica (Arthur Leal Ferreira e Marcus Vinícius Santos com o percurso temporal do conceito nos cursos e Mateus Bayer com a discussão de conceitos próximos entrelaçados, como os de guerra, transgressão e dissidência). Nesta proposta, o dossiê funcionaria como uma espécie de acordeom, ampliando o uso do conceito para outros campos (e produzindo derivas dele na sua extensão), mas favorecendo recolocações das suas próprias proposições, supondo-o mais raro, e estranho a qualquer definição mais pacífica e consensual (o efeito dicionário). É nestas provas que envolvem esta sístole e diástole que queríamos trazer discussões junto ao conceito. Provas a que o próprio Foucault o submeteu no trânsito deste em sua curta existência. Pois, como destaca Goldman, (2001), é neste aspecto estratégico e no calor das batalhas que devemos entender a produção dos conceitos foucaultianos, sempre em sintonia com as questões e lutas contemporâneas. É algo deste movimento estratégico que gostaríamos de trazer à cena neste dossiê.Arthur Arruda Leal Ferreira; Marcus Vinícius do Amaral Gama Santos; Mateus Thomaz Bayer; Raphael Thomas Pegden ReferênciasAGAMBEN, G. Homo Sacer. Belo Horizonte: Editora UFMG, 2002. (Trabalho originalmente publicado em 1995).DELEUZE, G. Post-scriptum sobre as sociedades de controle. In: DELEUZE, G. Conversações. São Paulo: Editora 34, 1992.ESPOSITO, R. Bíos: Biopolítica e filosofia. Buenos Aires/ Madri: Amorrortu, 2011.FOUCAULT, M. O nascimento da medicina social. In: MACHADO, R. (Org.). Microfísica de Poder. Rio de Janeiro: Graal, 1982. [Conferência pronunciada em 1974].________. As malhas do poder. In: Barbárie números 4/5, 1981/1982. [Conferências pronunciadas em 1976].________. História da Sexualidade I. A vontade de Saber. Rio de Janeiro: Graal, 1988. [Livro originalmente publicado em 1976].________. Préface, in Folie et Déraison. Histoire de la folie à l’agê classique. In: DEFERT, D. e EWALD, F. (Orgs.). Dits et Ecrits I. Paris: Gallimard, 1994 [Prefácio retirado em 1972, mas escrito junto com o corpo da tese em 1961].________. 1978-1979: Nascimento da biopolítica. In: FOUCAULT, M. Resumo dos cursos. Rio de Janeiro: Zahar, 1997. [Resumo publicado originalmente em 1979].________. O poder psiquiátrico: curso no Collège de France (1973-1974). Trad. Eduardo Brandão. São Paulo: Martins Fontes, 2006a. [Curso ministrado originalmente de novembro de 1973 a fevereiro de 1974].________. Seguridad, Territorio y Población. Buenos Aires: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 2006b. [Curso original de 1977-1978].________. Nacimiento de la biopolítica. Buenos Aires: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 2007. [Curso original de 1978-1979].________. Em defesa da sociedade: curso no Collège de France (1975-1976). São Paulo: Editora WMF Martins Fontes, 2010. [Curso ministrado originalmente de janeiro a março de 1976].GOLDMAN, M. Objetivação e Subjetivação no último Foucault. Em: CASTELO BRANCO, G. & NEVES, L. F. B. (Orgs.). Michel Foucault: da arqueologia do saber à estética da existência. Rio de Janeiro & Londrina: Nau & CEFIL, 1998.HAN, Byung-Chul. Psicopolítica: O neoliberalismo e as novas técnicas de poder. Tradução de Maurício Liesen. Belo Horizonte: Editora Âyiné, 2018.MBEMBE, A. Necropolítica. São Paulo: n-1, 2018.MACHADO, R. Ciência e Saber: a trajetória arqueológica de Michel Foucault. Rio de Janeiro: Graal, 1982.PÉLBART, P.P. Vida Capital. São Paulo: Iluminuras, 2003.ROSE, N. The politics of life itself: biomedicine, power, and subjectivity in the twenty-first century. Princeton: PUP, 2007.TIRADO, F. et alii. Movimiento y regímenes de vitalidad. La nueva organización de la vida en la biomedicina. Política y Sociedad, Vol. 49. 3: 571-590, 2012.________. et alii. The global condition of epidemics: Panoramas in A (H1N1) influenza and their consequences for One World One Health program. Social Science& Medicine 129: 113-122, 2015.VEYNE, P. Foucault revoluciona a história. In: Como se escreve a história? Brasília: Universidade de Brasília, 1980.***Os estágios de pós-doutoramento têm constituído, nos últimos anos, um dos raros espaços-tempos em que se pode respirar e eventualmente conspirar; ou seja, no belo “achado” guattariano, respirar junto...A produção textual associada a esses estágios, contudo, não costuma ter ampla divulgação: os escritos resultantes, eventualmente longos, encontram pouca acolhida nos periódicos científicos que, mesmo quando virtuais, insistem em uma (dispensável) padronização do número máximo de páginas.A salvo de tais restrições – ao menos ainda a salvo delas –, Mnemosine publica, no presente número, um trabalho longo e intenso que, sugestivamente, fala do silêncio imposto pela psicanálise à voz e à escrita de Reich.Além disso, a seção Biografia, sempre heterodoxa, traz um ensaio que poderíamos chamar de “biografia do comum” e, nesse intuito, conta com referências biobibliográficas; já Deleuze comparece, cuidadosamente traduzido, por meio da última aula do curso sobre a subjetivação em Michel Foucault.Há mais, é claro, na Parte Geral, e as conexões com o dossiê Biopolítica são múltiplas.Que elas nos ajudem a re(x)istir na mesma medida em que editores associados, autores, pareceristas, secretária, UERJ... nos auxiliam a publicar. Obrigada pela parceria e amizade.Até breve, saúde.Heliana de Barros Conde Rodrigues
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