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17 July 2020 Politics and trust in Ebola vaccine trials
The case of Ghana
John K. Aggrey, Wesley Shrum
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Abstract

Vaccine trials for infectious diseases take place in a milieu of trust in which scientists, regulatory institutions, and volunteers trust each other to play traditional roles. This milieu of trust emerges from a combination of preexisting linkages embedded in the local and national political context. Using the case of failed vaccine trials in Hohoe, Ghana, we explore this milieu of trust by employing the concept of tandems of trust and control, with a particular focus on the perceived characteristics of the disease and the linkages formed. An analysis of qualitative interviews collected in Hohoe following the West Africa Ebola outbreak of 20142016 shows that the trust/control nexus in vaccine trials precedes the implementation of those trials, while both the characteristics of Ebola and the political context shaped the formation and breakdown of relationships in the trial network.

John K. Aggrey and Wesley Shrum "Politics and trust in Ebola vaccine trials
The case of Ghana," Politics and the Life Sciences 39(1), 38-55, (17 July 2020). https://doi.org/10.1017/pls.2020.1
Published: 17 July 2020
JOURNAL ARTICLE
18 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
Ebola
Ghana
infectious disease
politics
trust
vaccine
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