ROSANA MACHIN BARBOSA

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
3
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Departamento de Medicina Preventiva, Faculdade de Medicina - Docente
LIM/38 - Laboratório de Epidemiologia e Imunobiologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 2 de 2
  • article 1 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    It was like this for me: homosexual, transvestite, and, now, trans: trans performativity, family, and health care
    (2020) PAULINO, Danilo Borges; MACHIN, Rosana; PASTOR-VALERO, Maria
    Transsexuality is an identity experience that emerges as an inevitable response to a way of organizing social life and, consequently, health care based on the production of subjects. We aim to understand how a certain trans identity context mobilizes identity performances, in articulation with family and health service. We performed an ethnography with a semi-structured interview and participant observation in a health service specialized in trans-specific care in the Brazilian National Health System (SUS), between December 2017 and July 2018. The story of Marilda was highlighted for being emblematic when narrating the transition from ""homosexual man"" to ""transvestite"" and, currently, to ""trans woman,"" in an identity performance that aims for family recognition and belonging, access to health, education, and a profession other than prostitution. Her story allows us to understand that trans people construct different meanings for their identity experiences, with elements that can reiterate binarism and heteronormativity. It is important to recognize, within the family and health context, that different identity performances are possible and that their senses may compose the integral health care of each trans person.
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Anonimato e segredo na reprodução humana com participação de doador: mudanças em perspectivas
    (2016) MACHIN, Rosana
    Reproductive technologies, when separating sexuality from reproduction, interfered not only in the relationships between the sexes, but also in the relationships of filiation, enabling the emergence of family settings due to the access to genetic material from others (egg, semen or embryo donors). The secrecy and anonymity that have always involved gamete donors have been challenged. In the last twenty years, various countries changed their legislation, adopting the policy of open identity of the donor of the genetic material. The possibility to know and have access to this identity (when reaching adulthood) or even the search for half-brothers can be a reality in many countries for children born through access to reproductive technology. The article emphasizes the matter of secrecy and anonymity involving the use of genetic material from others in reproductive technologies. The argument is set up through the debate in the United Kingdom concerning the abolition of the anonymity and its implications under the perspective of donors, claimant couples and the child. The study also reflects on the conceptions of family involved in this debate.