Cross-border health care is a growing phenomenon in the European Union.
When in need of medical treatment, patients increasingly act as informed
consumers who claim the right to choose their own providers, including
those beyond borders. They are supported and encouraged by factors such
as the Internet and more internationally trained health professionals,
and often motivated by dissatisfaction with health care provision in
their home country. Some authorities and health insurers even contract
with health care providers abroad or inform patients of such options.
Cross-border health care also encompasses doctors and nurses, who train
and work abroad and increasingly cooperate with colleagues abroad. In
some cases, health services themselves cross borders--through
telemedicine--or providers collaborate with financing institutions in
other countries.
This book explores these trends, looks at the legal framework and
examines the legal uncertainties surrounding rights, access,
reimbursement, quality and safety. It examines different approaches to
these concerns and the methodologies used to ease or resolve them. The
information and analysis presented mark an important step in the
continuing debate on a legal framework for cross-border health care and
will be of considerable use to policy-makers and those with an interest
in key aspects of cross-border health care.