Genetic Counseling and Preventive Medicine in Post-War Bosnia offers a
unique new perspective to longstanding debates on healthcare reforms in
Bosnia. In this penetrating analysis, Philip C. Aka argues that
twenty-five years after the ethnic war that shook Bosnia and Herzegovina
to its foundations, healthcare reforms are a function of preventive
medicine, defined as genetic counselling, backed by tobacco and alcohol
control. At its core, the book offers a fresh examination of healthcare
reforms in Bosnia set in the multidisciplinary field of bioethics,
supplemented by comparative health studies, and comparative human
rights. By offering an extensive list of electronically accessible
literature on healthcare accessible in the public domain, Aka delivers
an exemplar of research possibilities in the Information Age.