Abstract
This article explores problems posed by HIV anti-retroviral combination therapies by focusing on the UK media promotion of Trizivir (a GlaxoSmithKline three-drugs-in-one tablet). Using the substance of the figural in the style of feminist critiques of science and borrowing from actor network theory, a synergistic relationship comprising HIV, anti-HIV drugs, drug manufacturers and their media, medical publications, consumer representative treatment information and mass media is shown to construct a worrisome set of choices. The coming together of otherwise divergent interests and media raises questions about a certain adherence to drug manufacturer ‘facts’. But more provocative is the Trizivir campaign itself. For it suggests a stridency that goes well beyond the limits of its choices and, in doing so, offers the possibility for renewed consumer activism.
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