Since human migrations began, germs have traveled with people, animals and traded goods. In an interconnected and mobile world, diseases such as HIV/AIDS and SARS can spread rapidly. Yet international cooperation through agencies such as the World Health Organization also allows for a collective response to global health threats and faster response times. Nations have developed diverse health care systems, aiming for cost-effective treatment. Yet the diverse systems contribute to disparities in global health, including availability of technology, pharmaceutical companies targeting innovations to maximize profits, and providers abandoning areas of need for higher salaries in the West, just to name a few.

Qualms Arise Over Outsourcing Of Electronic Medical Records

US hospitals hesitate to send medical-record tech work to India's software firms
Amol Sharma, Ben Worthen
November 8, 2010

Taiwan's Medical Tourism Boom

Wealthy Chinese embrace medical tourism as a profit-making business
Jens Kastner
October 20, 2010

Hungary Toxic Sludge Spill an “Ecological Catastrophe” Says Government

Basic quality of life and environmental protections take back seat to industrial profits
Mark Tran
October 7, 2010

The Food Crisis

Population, climate change, limited land and water, all strain global supplies
Martin Walker
September 10, 2010

Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria Moving From South Asia to US

Traveling resistant bacteria could disrupt medical tourism
Donald G. McNeil Jr.
August 26, 2010