Past Projects
Digital Health Information (2024)
ExplorinG possibilities for ensuring better-quality health information in the digital space for All.
A collaborative research project between the Medical University of Vienna and the Austrian Public Health Institute (Gesundheit Österreich GmbH, GÖG). More information
The Liminal Cure (2023)
Living with Hepatitis C, its Treatment, and the Welfare State in Austria
For my dissertation project at the Department of Science & Technology Studies at Cornell University, I used the case study of Hepatitis C and its novel cure, direct-acting antivirals (DAAs), as a lens through which to challenge the idea that cure and health are matters related in direct and uncomplicated ways. I leveraged two-years of ethnographic engagement in Vienna, Austria, during a transitional moment in the history of Hepatitis C, when a cure for this intractable viral infectious liver disease was introduced, to understand how the cure was governed and implemented, how it traveled between care institutions and their clients, and how it was embodied, lived, and experienced in the everyday. I wove together analyses of the biopolitics of governing life in the welfare state and the translation of the science of the virus into public health policy with phenomenological accounts of how care extended through state and non-state institutions and how people experience the disease, becoming healthy, and the underlying moral economy of a European welfare state. The cure for Hepatitis C, and curative modes of health-making more generally, emerged therein as always-already liminal: intermediate and generative, but not all-encompassing and absolute. I asked what kind of care and what forms of health do or do not become available with cure, what the role of the welfare state was (and could be) in mediating the relationship of individuals to the bio-pharmaceutical industrial complex, and finally, how (more) livable futures and good forms of health might be crafted in the Anthropocene.
Cancerless (2021)
Cancer prevention and early detection among the homeless population in Europe: Co-adapting and implementing the Health Navigator Model
European Union Horizon 2020 Programme (GA 965351). Cancer is one the leading causes of death in Europe in the general population with reports noting the cancer-related mortality twice as high in the homeless population. Reasons for this excess are linked to risky health behaviors as well as significant barriers experienced by homeless people when trying to access the often highly fragmented health care systems.
CANCERLESS’ vision is to prevent cancer and allow for early diagnoses in the homeless population by delivering person-centered interventions to overcome health inequalities and facilitating timely access to quality cancer prevention and screening services for homeless people and leaving no one behind in Europe. The project aims to deliver evidence-based person-centered health care services to overcome health inequalities and facilitate timely access for the homeless to quality cancer prevention and screening services.
Social Prescribing I & II (2021-2022)
As part of AmberMed, I worked on the implementation of two projects on “social prescribing,” at the center of which was the development of an even closer connection between medicine and social work at the organization. As a connective link, the project established the role of “link workers” which would help clients/patients identify organizations that were “health promoting,” but not strictly medical, and connects clients/patients to this larger landscape of partner organizations and health system stakeholders. The project thereby also enabled more effective networking among organizations in the larger healthcare field in Vienna. The project was funded by the Austrian National Institute for Public Health (GÖG).
SoNAR-Global (2019-2021)
A Global Social Sciences Network for Infectious Threats and Antimicrobial Resistance
European Union Horizon 2020 Programme (GA 825671). All Sonar-Global partners work in the field of “infectious threats”. Our scope of action includes preparedness and response to epidemics, vaccine hesitancy, and the prevention of antimicrobial resistance. As social scientists, we recognize that efforts to tackle these threats may be ineffective if complex social, political, economic and ecological contexts are not addressed. The Sonar-Global platform provides opportunities for social scientists to work together and to build bridges. Through this platform, we create a critical mass of social scientists with whom we can share experiences, tools, models and curricula. We also foster closer collaborations with experts from other disciplines.
Other Projects
Outcome Evaluation for Active Living Interventions for Older Adults
Qualitative short-term research project on lived experiences of older adults with active living interventions at the Medical University of Vienna, Center for Public Health
“MELD in context: Organ Allocation Waiting Lists and the Prioritization of Livers and Lives”
Close analysis of expert discourse on the (e)valuation and ranking mechanisms in health, specifically on the introduction of the MELD score for allocating livers on solid-organ waiting lists in the United States. I discuss how the parameters of evaluating donor ranks shift towards algorithmic reasoning, divorced from socio-political context.
“Tracing Identities through Time: Assisted Reproduction, Narratives of Time and Women’s Biographical Work”
Qualitative research project involving interviews, document, and policy analysis around women's biographical experiences with assisted reproductive treatment in Austria. I analyzed how the temporal frames of Austria’s legal understanding of “natural” human reproduction, the bureaucracy of the welfare state, and the practical affordances of fertility treatment shape women’s self-understanding as faulty and wasteful - Master’s Thesis at the Department of Science-Technology-Society at the University of Vienna (see also Publications)
School Social Work in Austria
Three-year process evaluation of projects implementing social and outreach work at schools in Austria involving quantitative surveys, document analysis, and focus groups at the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Health Promotion Research (see also Publications)