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Informationen zum Autor I. Glenn Cohen is an Assistant Professor at Harvard Law School and Co-Director of the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard Law School. Klappentext The Globalization of Health Care is the first book to offer a comprehensive legal and ethical analysis of the most interesting and broadest reaching development in health care of the last twenty years: its globalization. It ties together the manifestation of this globalization in four related subject areas - medical tourism, medical migration (the physician "brain drain"), telemedicine, and pharmaceutical research and development, and integrates them in a philosophical discussion of issues of justice and equity relating to the globalization of health care. The time for such an examination is right. Medical tourism and telemedicine are growing multi-billion-dollar industries affecting large numbers of patients. The U.S. heavily depends on foreign-trained doctors to staff its health care system, and nearly forty percent of clinical trials are now run in the developing world, with indications of as much of a 10-fold increase in the past 20 years. NGOs across the world are agitating for increased access to necessary pharmaceuticals in the developing world, claiming that better access to medicine would save millions from early death at a relatively low cost. Coming on the heels of the most expansive reform to U.S. health care in fifty years, this book plots the ways in which this globalization will develop as the reform is implemented. Zusammenfassung The Globalization of Health Care is the first book to offer a comprehensive legal and ethical analysis of the most interesting and broadest reaching development in health care of the last twenty years: its globalization. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction Glenn Cohen Patient Mortality In Medical Tourism: Examining News Media Reports Of Deaths Following Travel For Cosmetic Surgery And Bariatric Surgery Part I: Medical Tourism For Services Legal in the Patient's Home Country Chapter One Leigh Turner Patient Mortality In Medical Tourism: Examining News Media Reports Of Deaths Following Travel For Cosmetic Surgery And Bariatric Surgery Chapter Two Thomas R. McLean Jurisdiction 101 For Medical Tourism Purchases Made In Europe Chapter Three Valorie A. Crooks Canadian Print News Media Coverage Of Medical Tourism: Examining Jeremy Snyder Key Themes And Ethical Gaps Leigh Turner Krystyna Adams Rory Johnston Victoria Casey Chapter Four Nathan Cortez Cross-Border Health Care And The Hydraulics Of Health Reform Chapter Five Hilko J. Meyer Current Legislation On Cross-Border Healthcare In The European Union Chapter Six I. Glenn Cohen Medical Tourism And Global Justice For Services Illegal or Unapproved in the Patient's Home Country Chapter Seven Richard F. Storrow The Proportionality Problem In Cross-Border Reproductive Care Chapter Eight Kimberly M. Mutcherson Open Fertility Borders: Defending Access To Cross Border Fertility Care In The United States Chapter Nine Hazel Biggs Tourism: A Matter Of Life And Death In The United Kingdom Caroline Jones Chapter Ten Aaron D. Levine The Roles And Responsibilities Of Physicians In Patients' Decisions About Leslie E. Wolf Unproven Stem Cell Therapies Chapter Eleven Vivien Runnels Global Policies And Local Practice In The Ethical Recruitment Of Corinne Packer Internationally Trained Health Human Resources Ronald LabontÃ(c) Part II: Medical Worker Migration Chapter Twelve Nir Eyal Conditioning Medical Scholarships On Long, Future Service: A Defense Till Bÿrnighausen Chapter Thirteen Allyn L. Taylor A Global Legal Architecture To Address The Challenges Of International Ibadat S. Dhillon Health Worker Migration: A Case...