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Featured researches published by Rebecca Whitmore.


BMJ Open | 2013

Ethical and legal implications of the risks of medical tourism for patients: A qualitative study of Canadian health and safety representatives' perspectives

Valorie A. Crooks; Leigh Turner; I. Glenn Cohen; Janet Bristeir; Jeremy Snyder; Victoria Casey; Rebecca Whitmore

Objectives Medical tourism involves patients’ intentional travel to privately obtain medical care in another country. Empirical evidence regarding health and safety risks facing medical tourists is limited. Consideration of this issue is dominated by speculation and lacks meaningful input from people with specific expertise in patient health and safety. We consulted with patient health and safety experts in the Canadian province of British Columbia to explore their views concerning risks that medical tourists may be exposed to. Herein, we report on the findings, linking them to existing ethical and legal issues associated with medical tourism. Design We held a focus group in September 2011 in Vancouver, British Columbia with professionals representing different domains of patient health and safety expertise. The focus group was transcribed verbatim and analysed thematically. Participants Seven professionals representing the domains of tissue banking, blood safety, health records, organ transplantation, dental care, clinical ethics and infection control participated. Results Five dominant health and safety risks for outbound medical tourists were identified by participants: (1) complications; (2) specific concerns regarding organ transplantation; (3) transmission of antibiotic-resistant organisms; (4) (dis)continuity of medical documentation and (5) (un)informed decision-making. Conclusions Concern was expressed that medical tourism might have unintended and undesired effects upon patients’ home healthcare systems. The individual choices of medical tourists could have significant public consequences if healthcare facilities in their home countries must expend resources treating postoperative complications. Participants also expressed concern that medical tourists returning home with infections, particularly antibiotic-resistant infections, could place others at risk of exposure to infections that are refractory to standard treatment regimens and thereby pose significant public health risks.


International Journal of Health Services | 2015

The Major Forces that Need to Back Medical Tourism Were in Alignment: Championing Development of Barbados's Medical Tourism Sector.

Rory Johnston; Valorie A. Crooks; Jeremy Snyder; Rebecca Whitmore

Governments around the world have expressed interest in developing local medical tourism sectors, framing the industry as an opportunity for economic growth and health system improvement. This article addresses questions about how the desire to develop a medical tourism sector in a country emerges and which stakeholders are involved in both creating momentum and informing its progress. Presenting a thematic analysis of 19 key informant interviews conducted with domestic and international stakeholders in Barbados’s medical tourism sector in 2011, we examine the roles that “actors” and “champions” at home and abroad have played in the sector’s development. Physicians and the Barbadian government, along with international investors, the Medical Tourism Association, and development agencies, have promoted the industry, while actors such as medical tourists and international hospital accreditation companies are passively framing the terms of how medical tourism is unfolding in Barbados. Within this context, we seek to better understand the roles and relationships of various actors and champions implicated in the development of medical tourism in order to provide a more nuanced understanding of how the sector is emerging in Barbados and elsewhere and how its development might impact equitable health system development.


Global Health Action | 2015

Medical tourism's impacts on health worker migration in the Caribbean: five examples and their implications for global justice

Jeremy Snyder; Valorie A. Crooks; Rory Johnston; Krystyna Adams; Rebecca Whitmore

Medical tourism is a practice where individuals cross international borders in order to access medical care. This practice can impact the global distribution of health workers by potentially reducing the emigration of health workers from destination countries for medical tourists and affecting the internal distribution of these workers. Little has been said, however, about the impacts of medical tourism on the immigration of health workers to medical tourism destinations. We discuss five patterns of medical tourism-driven health worker migration to medical tourism destinations: 1) long-term international migration; 2) long-term diasporic migration; 3) long-term migration and ‘black sheep’; 4) short-term migration via time share; and 5) short-term migration via patient-provider dyad. These patterns of health worker migration have repercussions for global justice that include potential negative impacts on the following: 1) health worker training; 2) health worker distributions; 3) local provision of care; and 4) local economies. In order to address these potential negative impacts, policy makers in destination countries should work to ensure that changes in health worker training and licensure aimed at promoting the medical tourism sector are also supportive of the health needs of the domestic population. Policy makers in both source and destination countries should be aware of the effects of medical tourism on health worker flows both into and out of medical tourism destinations and work to ensure that the potential harms of these worker flows to both groups are mitigated.


BMC Health Services Research | 2015

Inbound medical tourism to Barbados: a qualitative examination of local lawyers’ prospective legal and regulatory concerns

Valorie A. Crooks; I. Glenn Cohen; Krystyna Adams; Rebecca Whitmore; Jeffrey Morgan

BackgroundEnabled by globalizing processes such as trade liberalization, medical tourism is a practice that involves patients’ intentional travel to privately obtain medical care in another country. Empirical legal research on this issue is limited and seldom based on the perspectives of destination countries receiving medical tourists. We consulted with diverse lawyers from across Barbados to explore their views on the prospective legal and regulatory implications of the developing medical tourism industry in the country.MethodsWe held a focus group in February 2014 in Barbados with lawyers from across the country. Nine lawyers with diverse legal backgrounds participated. Focus group moderators summarized the study objective and engaged participants in identifying the local implications of medical tourism and the anticipated legal and regulatory concerns. The focus group was transcribed verbatim and analyzed thematically.ResultsFive dominant legal and regulatory themes were identified through analysis: (1) liability; (2) immigration law; (3) physician licensing; (4) corporate ownership; and (5) reputational protection.ConclusionsTwo predominant legal and ethical concerns associated with medical tourism in Barbados were raised by participants and are reflected in the literature: the ability of medical tourists to recover medical malpractice for adverse events; and the effects of medical tourism on access to health care in the destination country. However, the participants also identified several topics that have received much less attention in the legal and ethical literature. Overall this analysis reveals that lawyers, at least in Barbados, have an important role to play in the medical tourism sector beyond litigation – particularly in transactional and gatekeeper capacities. It remains to be seen whether these findings are specific to the ecology of Barbados or can be extrapolated to the legal climate of other medical tourism destination countries.


Health & Place | 2015

Ethics of Care in Medical Tourism: Informal Caregivers' Narratives of Responsibility, Vulnerability and Mutuality

Rebecca Whitmore; Valorie A. Crooks; Jeremy Snyder

This study examines the experiences of informal caregivers in medical tourism through an ethics of care lens. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 20 Canadians who had accompanied their friends or family members abroad for surgery, asking questions that dealt with their experiences prior to, during and after travel. Thematic analysis revealed three themes central to an ethics of care: responsibility, vulnerability and mutuality. Ethics of care theorists have highlighted how care has been historically devalued. We posit that medical tourism reproduces dominant narratives about care in a novel care landscape. Informal care goes unaccounted for by the industry, as it occurs in largely private spaces at a geographic distance from the home countries of medical tourists.


BMC Public Health | 2017

“Ensure that you are well aware of the risks you are taking…”: actions and activities medical tourists’ informal caregivers can undertake to protect their health and safety

Valorie A. Crooks; Rebecca Whitmore; Jeremy Snyder; Leigh Turner

BackgroundWhen seeking care at international hospitals and clinics, medical tourists are often accompanied by family members, friends, or other caregivers. Such caregiver-companions assume a variety of roles and responsibilities and typically offer physical assistance, provide emotional support, and aid in decision-making and record keeping as medical tourists navigate unfamiliar environments. While traveling abroad, medical tourists’ caregiver-companions can find themselves confronted with challenging communication barriers, financial pressures, emotional strain, and unsafe environments.MethodsTo better understand what actions and activities medical tourists’ informal caregivers can undertake to protect their health and safety, 20 interviews were conducted with Canadians who had experienced accompanying a medical tourist to an international health care facility for surgery. Interview transcripts were subsequently used to identify inductive and deductive themes central to the advice research participants offered to prospective caregiver-companions.ResultsAdvice offered to future caregiver-companions spanned the following actions and activities to protect health and safety: become an informed health care consumer; assess and avoid exposure to identifiable risks; anticipate the care needs of medical tourists and thereby attempt to guard against caregiver burden; become familiar with important logistics related to travel and anticipated recovery timelines; and take practical measures to protect one’s own health.ConclusionGiven that a key feature of public health is to use research findings to develop interventions and policies intended to promote health and reduce risks to individuals and populations, the paper draws upon major points of advice offered by study participants to take the first steps toward the development of an informational intervention designed specifically for the health and safety needs of medical tourists’ caregiver companions. While additional research is required to finalize the content and form of such an intervention, this study provides insight into what practical advice former caregiver-companions state should be shared with individuals considering assuming these roles and responsibilities in the future. In addition, this research draws attention to the importance of ensuring that such an intervention is web-based and readily accessible by prospective caregiver-companions.


Chapters | 2015

‘They go the extra mile, the extra ten miles...’: examining Canadian medical tourists’ interactions with health care workers abroad

Valorie A. Crooks; Victoria Casey; Rebecca Whitmore; Rory Johnston; Jeremy Snyder

The patient-health care worker relationship can have important implications for people’s health. This chapter provides insights into how patients relate with health care workers abroad, while engaging in medical tourism. Presenting the findings of a thematic analysis that examines 32 telephone interviews with former Canadian medical tourists, the authors discuss participants’ views on clinical interactions with health care workers abroad. The thematic analysis of the interviews led to two main findings: 1) participants perceived that health care workers took a team-based approach and were available and accessible to patients beyond what they had experienced at home; and 2) medical tourists felt that care providers acknowledged their needs and established informal, comfortable relationships that some maintained on return to Canada. The narratives of Canadian medical tourists demonstrate that the medical tourism industry is selling a style of care that patients perceive as highly personalized, attentive, and empathetic. The authors’ findings contribute to understanding what leads individuals to participate in medical tourism. However, it is important not to overemphasize patient satisfaction in medical tourism, which may obscure other important aspects of the treatment experience, such as continuity of care and actual health outcomes.


Archive | 2015

Medical Tourism in Barbados: Negotiating Inherent Tensions

Krystyna Adams; Rebecca Whitmore; Rory Johnston; Valorie A. Crooks


Health & Social Care in The Community | 2017

A Qualitative Exploration of how Canadian Informal Caregivers in Medical Tourism use Experiential Resources to Cope with Providing Transnational Care

Rebecca Whitmore; Valorie A. Crooks; Jeremy Snyder


Archive | 2015

Medical Tourism in the Tropics: New Regulation is Needed to Tackle Equity and Quality Concerns in Barbados

Krystyna Adams; Valorie A. Crooks; I. Glenn Cohen; Rebecca Whitmore

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Leigh Turner

University of Minnesota

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Leon Hoffman

Simon Fraser University

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