Professional Documents
Culture Documents
World in Brief 5 November 2009
World in Brief 5 November 2009
World in Brief 5 November 2009
The University of Ottawa, Canada has issued a call for papers for its conference on
international clinical research taking place on 14 to 16 June 2010. They are inviting
professors, clinicians, researchers, decision-makers and administrators to submit their
research abstracts for either an oral presentation or as a poster in one of four themes that
are:
The University of Ottawa will also accept clinical projects for presentation as a poster and
all abstracts must include the title, the names or names of the authors and a maximum of a
300-word description. The deadline to submit an abstract is 30 November 2009 by email
to fss-nsg@uottawa.ca.
Consultations
Case law from the European Court of Justice allows patients to seek health care, including
private care, in another country within the European Economic Area and their home
country must pay if they are entitled to receive the treatment under their home health care
system. The EEA member states consist of all twenty-seven EU member states as well as
Iceland, Lichtenstein and Norway.
The UK Department of Health has issued a consultation on its draft regulations and
guidance on protecting the NHS in relation to patient mobility and cross-border health
care. These documents aim to provide greater clarity to the NHS on the application of
case law on cross-border health care, for both patients from the UK seeking treatment in
another country and for incoming patients from other EEA member states. The DH is
seeking views from NHS stakeholders on the content of these proposed interim regulations
and guidance for their content, clarity and appropriateness of measures on prior
authorisation and reimbursement of costs. They anticipate bringing the regulations and
guidance into force in January 2010.
The RCN is responding to this consultation and is seeking members’ opinions to help
formulate our submission. Please email international.office@rcn.org.uk with your
comments by 15 November 2009.
The European Commission’s development directorate recently issued a very broad issues
paper looking at the European Union’s role in global health. This paper looks at the nature
of global health, EU strategies and actions to date, and then continues to identify
challenges and future potential areas for action. The EU is a major funder of international
development assistance and this consultation is seeking views on action to stem the brain
drain of health workers, what role civil society should play and what the priorities should
be. There is a strong focus on equity and access to services.
We are inviting our members’ views to help formulate the RCN’s response and if you
would like to share your experiences or expertise in relation to the questionnaire,
particularly from question nine onwards, please email your responses by 23 November to
international.office@rcn.org.uk.
This new list will come into force following its approval by the ILO’s governing body at
its March 2010 session.
Events
The OECD presented a paper at this roundtable on tracking the growth in medical
tourism as an aid to help Government Ministers shape this debate. This paper
discusses a two-year project over 2009 to 2010 that will measure the extent of trade in
health services, assess the impact of regulatory and trade reforms in services in order
to develop evidence-based policies. They are collaborating closely with the European
Commission, the World Health Organization and are extending the project to
countries not in membership of the OECD.
Public Health
Over two million people are in penal institutions across Europe at any one time;
prisons are extremely high-risk environments for the transmission of infectious
diseases owing to factors such as overcrowding, poor nutrition and limited access to
health care.
Last month, a conference on prison health protection organised by the World Health
Organization’s European region took place in Madrid where health experts from over
fifty countries agreed a set of recommendations to tackle communicable diseases in
prisons. The aim of the Madrid Recommendation is to ensure that, rather than making
matters worse, prisons are a setting where health and health behaviours improve and
to reduce the risk of re-offending. These measures include: