Description

Book Synopsis

This book sets out a critical sociological approach to âpersonalised medicineâ (PM), highlighting its limitations and flaws, but also emphasising its hopeful potentialities for a better medicine in the future.

Bringing together perspectives from science and technology studies, medical sociology, law and bioethics, the book traces personalised medicine from its historical roots in disease classification and genomics to its data-driven present of digital infrastructures, algorithmic prediction, and precision therapeutics. Across seven chapters, it explores how measurement, classification, and datafication shape medical knowledge; how infrastructures and platforms distribute benefits and risks; how publics are imagined as patients, consumers, and citizens; and how privacy, access, and equity are negotiated in global health systems. The book concludes by outlining possible futures grounded in solidarity, patient-centered care, and democratic innovationâoffering practical ways to shift personalised medicine from a privilege for the few to a shared public good.

Written for scholars and practitioners in science and technology studies, sociology of medicine, health policy, and bioethics, as well as for clinicians and policymakers, this book will engage readers seeking to understandâand reshapeâthe social futures of data-intensive healthcare. It will also be useful for policy makers debating the implementation of different personalised medicine projects in local or national healthcare systems.

Personalised Medicine

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    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Wed 10 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Michael Morrison

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      View other formats and editions of Personalised Medicine by Michael Morrison

      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 18/05/2026
      ISBN13: 9781032246307, 978-1032246307
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This book sets out a critical sociological approach to âpersonalised medicineâ (PM), highlighting its limitations and flaws, but also emphasising its hopeful potentialities for a better medicine in the future.

      Bringing together perspectives from science and technology studies, medical sociology, law and bioethics, the book traces personalised medicine from its historical roots in disease classification and genomics to its data-driven present of digital infrastructures, algorithmic prediction, and precision therapeutics. Across seven chapters, it explores how measurement, classification, and datafication shape medical knowledge; how infrastructures and platforms distribute benefits and risks; how publics are imagined as patients, consumers, and citizens; and how privacy, access, and equity are negotiated in global health systems. The book concludes by outlining possible futures grounded in solidarity, patient-centered care, and democratic innovationâoffering practical ways to shift personalised medicine from a privilege for the few to a shared public good.

      Written for scholars and practitioners in science and technology studies, sociology of medicine, health policy, and bioethics, as well as for clinicians and policymakers, this book will engage readers seeking to understandâand reshapeâthe social futures of data-intensive healthcare. It will also be useful for policy makers debating the implementation of different personalised medicine projects in local or national healthcare systems.

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