Recruiting health workers from countries on the WHO’s safeguard list without robust and reciprocal benefits for the countries sending them does not meet ethical standards, authors say
Who would object to a more efficient healthcare system, where money is spent on doctors and nurses, as opposed to the bureaucrats who contribute to patient suffering?
Litman, 46, teaches English as a second language to students in Jersey City. Her students don’t use—and perhaps have never even heard—English words like “suicide.” But they know “unalive.”
When it comes to fixing Canada’s ailing healthcare systems, governments have often failed to set that baseline—so it’s difficult to know how well the treatment has worked.