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14 Med., Health Care & Phil. 1 (2011)

handle is hein.journals/medhcph14 and id is 1 raw text is: Med Health Care and Philos (2011) 14:1-3
DOI 10.1007/s11019-010-9300-1
Travelling bioethics
Henk ten Have - Bert Gordijn
Published online: 18 November 2010
© The Author(s) 2010. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com

When there are no strikes or natural disasters, travelling
usually is a pleasure. Some of us have returned from the
annual conference of the American Society for Bioethics
and Humanities in San Diego, while others have good
memories of the 10th World Congress of Bioethics in
Singapore last summer. But not only bioethicists are trav-
elling, bioethics itself is as well, following the globaliza-
tion of health care and medical research. Anthropologist
Petryna (2009), in her interesting book When experiments
travel, has shown how the clinical trials industry has
moved into the developing countries, using the poor as
research subjects and ignoring all the norms that have been
established in the developed world.
Bioethics has become a global concern and has now
really moved into a new stage involving all countries and
cultures. This issue of the journal testifies of this expansion
of the scope of bioethics.
However, there are different perspectives on the glob-
alization of bioethics. In this issue, Gielen et al. (2011)
report about the attitudes of palliative care professionals in
New Delhi towards withholding life-sustaining treatment.
The need for palliative care exists everywhere. It is there-
fore interesting to study how non-treatment decisions are
made in other countries. The authors refer to the specific
context in India, such as the legal provisions that facilitate
that refusal of life-sustaining treatment can be regarded as
suicide, making physicians reluctant to withdraw or with-
hold such treatment. The authors also, though succinctly,
refer to the socio-economic context, pointing out that
financial considerations play an important role in treatment
H. ten Have (®) - B. Gordijn
Dublin City University, Dublin, Ireland
e-mail: tenhaveh@duq.edu

decisions. Regardless of these different contexts, however,
the respondents use more or less the same normative
framework for decisions to withhold life-sustaining treat-
ment as in the West. It is difficult to know how represen-
tative the opinions of less than 30 physicians and nurses in
various palliative care settings in New Delhi are for palli-
ative care professionals in India. After all, the respondents
are highly educated people, imbued with the attitudes of
palliative care and not much influenced by Hindu beliefs.
But the study demonstrates that there are two different
research approaches to global bioethical issues. One
approach is to study other countries to examine how ethical
problems are perceived, presented, addressed, for example
to examine how treatment decisions in palliative care are
made in India or other countries. We can apply the usual
research methods with the standard questionnaire and
hypothetical cases to gauge the opinions of colleagues in
India. The results often trigger a response similar to the
exclamation of surprise of Western tourists in Bangkok or
Nairobi: 'it is just like home'-'they have everything we
have'. Modern health care is universal, medicine is almost
the same everywhere, and people have similar diseases.
Why should bioethics be different? Everybody who leaves
the main roads and looks beyond the glamorous buildings
finds a different reality. Nairobi has one of the vastest slumps
in Africa, while Bangkok has huge areas of cardboard huts
'sheltering' illegal laborers from the Northern provinces.
Palliative care in India is fine, but can we ignore the context?
India is a vast country, with 25% of the population below the
poverty line. The majority of the population has no access to
health care; only 10% of the population has health insurance.
There is a shortage of doctors and nurses, and a significant
lack of hospital beds. Even if there are adequate health
facilities, basic sanitation is lacking. There is no city at
the moment with full-day water supply. Within this context,

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