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Publication


Featured researches published by Laurence Monnais.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Understanding Vaccine Hesitancy in Canada: Results of a Consultation Study by the Canadian Immunization Research Network

Eve Dubé; Dominique Gagnon; Manale Ouakki; Julie A. Bettinger; Maryse Guay; Scott A. Halperin; Kumanan Wilson; Janice E. Graham; Holly O. Witteman; Shannon M. MacDonald; William A. Fisher; Laurence Monnais; Dat Tran; Arnaud Gagneur; Juliet Guichon; Vineet Saini; Jane M. Heffernan; Samantha B Meyer; S. Michelle Driedger; Joshua Greenberg; Heather MacDougall

“Vaccine hesitancy” is a concept now frequently used in vaccination discourse. The increased popularity of this concept in both academic and public health circles is challenging previously held perspectives that individual vaccination attitudes and behaviours are a simple dichotomy of accept or reject. A consultation study was designed to assess the opinions of experts and health professionals concerning the definition, scope, and causes of vaccine hesitancy in Canada. We sent online surveys to two panels (1- vaccination experts and 2- front-line vaccine providers). Two questionnaires were completed by each panel, with data from the first questionnaire informing the development of questions for the second. Our participants defined vaccine hesitancy as an attitude (doubts, concerns) as well as a behaviour (refusing some / many vaccines, delaying vaccination). Our findings also indicate that both vaccine experts and front-line vaccine providers have the perception that vaccine rates have been declining and consider vaccine hesitancy an important issue to address in Canada. Diffusion of negative information online and lack of knowledge about vaccines were identified as the key causes of vaccine hesitancy by the participants. A common understanding of vaccine hesitancy among researchers, public health experts, policymakers and health care providers will better guide interventions that can more effectively address vaccine hesitancy within Canada.


Comparative Studies in Society and History | 2016

The Values of Versatility: Pharmacists, Plants, and Place in the French (Post)Colonial World

Laurence Monnais; Noémi Tousignant

Colonial pharmacists bio-prospected, acclimatized, chemically screened, and tinkered with plants and their parts, hoping to create products to supply colonial public health care, metropolitan industries, and imperial markets. This article’s approach is to examine the trajectories of expertise of two French colonial pharmacists, Franck Guichard and Joseph Kerharo, to illuminate the history of modern medicinal plant research. Both men studied medicinal plants as part of their colonial duties, yet their interests in indigenous therapies exceeded and outlived colonial projects. We take this “overflow” as our point of departure to explore how science transformed medicinal plant values in French colonial and postcolonial contexts. Our focus is on the relationship between value and space—on the processes of conceptual and material (de-/ re-)localization through which plant value is calculated, intensified, and distributed. We study and compare these processes in French Indochina and French West Africa where Guichard and Kerharo, respectively, engaged in them most intensively. We show that their engagements with matter, value, knowledge, and mobility defy easy categorizations of medicinal plant science as either extractive or neo-traditionalist. By eschewing simple equations of scientists’ motivations with political projects and knowledge-production, we argue that approaching plant medicine through trajectories of expertise opens up grounds for finer analyses of how colonial power and projects, and their legacies, shaped scientific activity. 462 L A U R E N C E M O N N A I S A N D N O É M I T O U S I G N A N T of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S001041751600013X Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 54.70.40.11, on 23 Aug 2019 at 16:20:17, subject to the Cambridge Core terms


East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal | 2009

From Colonial Medicines to Global Pharmaceuticals? The Introduction of Sulfa Drugs in French Vietnam

Laurence Monnais


M S-medecine Sciences | 2017

Médecines alternatives, du continent nord-américain à l’Asie orientale - Entre exclusion réitérée et pluralisme incorporé

Laurence Monnais


Archive | 2012

Global Movements, Local Concerns

Laurence Monnais; Harold J. Cook


Revue européenne des migrations internationales | 2007

Culture, immigration et santé. La consommation de médicaments chez les Vietnamiens de Montréal

Marie-Ève Blanc; Laurence Monnais


Canadian Medical Association Journal | 2018

Vaccinating in the age of apathy: measles vaccination in Canada, 1963–1998

Heather MacDougall; Laurence Monnais


Archive | 2017

5. Not without Risk: The Complex History of Vaccine Resistance in Central Canada, 1885–1960

Heather MacDougall; Laurence Monnais


M S-medecine Sciences | 2017

Pour une histoire « alternative » de la médecine

Laurence Monnais


Archive | 2016

Médecine(s) et santé : Une petite histoire globale - 19e et 20e siècles

Laurence Monnais

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Arnaud Gagneur

Université de Sherbrooke

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Dat Tran

University of Toronto

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Julie A. Bettinger

University of British Columbia

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