Looking into the black mirror of the overdose crisis: Assessing the harms of collaborative surveillance technologies in the United States response

Author:

Syvertsen Jennifer1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology University of California, Riverside Riverside California USA

Abstract

AbstractDrug overdose is a leading cause of death among adults in the United States, prompting calls for more surveillance data and data sharing across public health and law enforcement to address the crisis. This paper integrates Black feminist science and technology studies (STS) into an anthropological analysis of the collision of public health, policing, and technology as embedded in the US National Overdose Response Strategy and its technological innovation, the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP). The dystopian Netflix series “Black Mirror,” which explores the seemingly useful but quietly destructive potential of technology, offers a lens through which to speculate upon and anticipate the harms of collaborative surveillance projects. Ultimately, I ask: are such technological interventions a benevolent approach to a public health crisis or are we looking into a black mirror of racialized surveillance and criminalization of overdose in the United States?

Publisher

Wiley

Reference85 articles.

1. Public Safety and Public Health Efforts to Combat the Opioid Epidemic;Adaniya Naomi;Department of Justice Journal of Federal Law and Practice,2018

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3. Public Health and Police: Building Ethical and Equitable Opioid Responses;Allen Bennett;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,2021

4. Information Technology Solutions for Overdose Prevention: Perspectives from the Field;Ali Sarah;Journal of Applied Research on Children: Informing Policy for Children at Risk,2020

5. An Equity‐Based Scoring System for Evaluating Surveillance‐Related Harm in Public Health Crises;Amani Bita;Ethnicity & Disease,2023

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