“Medical Tourism” is the travel of residents of one country to another country for treatment. In this article I focus on travel abroad to purchase organs for transplant, what I will call “Transplant Tourism.” With the exception of Iran, organ sale is illegal across the globe, but many destination countries have thriving black markets, either due to their willful failure to police the practice or more good faith lack of resources to detect it. I focus on the sale of kidneys, the most common subject of transplant tourism, though much of what I say could be applied to other organs as well. Part I briefly reviews some data on sellers, recipients, and brokers. Part II discusses the bioethical issues posed by the trade, and Part III focuses on po...
This article argues for a regulatory and institutional response towards organ trading, tourism and t...
The organ trafficking market is on the rise worldwide. Numerous unfortunate stories of networks of b...
Organ trade constitutes the sale and purchase of organs for financial or material gain. Although pro...
Medical tourism, as defined by scholar Glenn Cohen, is the travel of residents of one country to an...
The international medical travel industry includes patients seeking to access human biological mater...
Copyright © 2012 Frederike Ambagtsheer et al. This is an open access article distributed under the C...
The term 'Transplant Tourism' is becoming commonly used to describe any form of travel that serves i...
While the trade in human organs remains largely in the darkness as it is hardly reported, detected o...
The extent of organ sales from commercial living donors (CLDs) or vendors has now become evident. At...
Transplant tourism (TT) has developed into a global concern for international organizations, transpl...
The growth of medical tourism in developing nations has not only helped the local economies but al...
The demand for organs exceeds supply in almost every country, including New Zealand. As such, schola...
Organ availability for transplantation has become an increasingly complex and difficult question in ...
The General Agreement for Trade in Services (GATS) has led to liberalization of the international he...
An exploration of the relationships between organ markets, trafficking and tourism. The arguments in...
This article argues for a regulatory and institutional response towards organ trading, tourism and t...
The organ trafficking market is on the rise worldwide. Numerous unfortunate stories of networks of b...
Organ trade constitutes the sale and purchase of organs for financial or material gain. Although pro...
Medical tourism, as defined by scholar Glenn Cohen, is the travel of residents of one country to an...
The international medical travel industry includes patients seeking to access human biological mater...
Copyright © 2012 Frederike Ambagtsheer et al. This is an open access article distributed under the C...
The term 'Transplant Tourism' is becoming commonly used to describe any form of travel that serves i...
While the trade in human organs remains largely in the darkness as it is hardly reported, detected o...
The extent of organ sales from commercial living donors (CLDs) or vendors has now become evident. At...
Transplant tourism (TT) has developed into a global concern for international organizations, transpl...
The growth of medical tourism in developing nations has not only helped the local economies but al...
The demand for organs exceeds supply in almost every country, including New Zealand. As such, schola...
Organ availability for transplantation has become an increasingly complex and difficult question in ...
The General Agreement for Trade in Services (GATS) has led to liberalization of the international he...
An exploration of the relationships between organ markets, trafficking and tourism. The arguments in...
This article argues for a regulatory and institutional response towards organ trading, tourism and t...
The organ trafficking market is on the rise worldwide. Numerous unfortunate stories of networks of b...
Organ trade constitutes the sale and purchase of organs for financial or material gain. Although pro...