Ineffective responses to unlikely outbreaks: Hypothesis building in newly‐emerging infectious disease outbreaks

Author:

Jephcott Freya L12ORCID,Wood James L N1,Cunningham Andrew A2,Bonney J H Kofi3,Nyarko‐Ameyaw Stephen4,Maier Ursula5,Geissler P Wenzel6

Affiliation:

1. Centre for the Study of Existential Risk (CSER), University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

2. Institute of Zoology Zoological Society of London London UK

3. Virology Department Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, University of Ghana Accra Ghana

4. Disease Control Unit, Techiman Municipal Health Directorate Ghana Health Service Techiman Ghana

5. Paediatrics Department Holy Family Hospital Techiman Ghana

6. Department of Social Anthropology University of Oslo Oslo Norway

Abstract

AbstractOver the last 30 years, there has been significant investment in research and infrastructure aimed at mitigating the threat of newly emerging infectious diseases (NEID). Core epidemiological processes, such as outbreak investigations, however, have received little attention and have proceeded largely unchecked and unimproved. Using ethnographic material from an investigation into a cryptic encephalitis outbreak in the Brong‐Ahafo Region of Ghana in 2010–2013, in this paper we trace processes of hypothesis building and their relationship to the organizational structures of the response. We demonstrate how commonly recurring features of NEID investigations produce selective pressures in hypothesis building that favor iterations of pre‐existing “exciting” hypotheses and inhibit the pursuit of alternative hypotheses, regardless of relative likelihood. These findings contribute to the growing anthropological and science and technology studies (STS) literature on the epistemic communities that coalesce around suspected NEID outbreaks and highlight an urgent need for greater scrutiny of core epidemiological processes.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Anthropology,General Medicine

Reference48 articles.

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