Ethical, Legal and Social Aspects of Healthcare for Migrants
Perspectives from the UK and Germany
Herausgeber: Kuehlmeyer, Katja; Huxtable, Richard; Klingler, Corinna
Ethical, Legal and Social Aspects of Healthcare for Migrants
Perspectives from the UK and Germany
Herausgeber: Kuehlmeyer, Katja; Huxtable, Richard; Klingler, Corinna
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Presenting a comparative study of the UK and Germany, this volume increases our knowledge of a broad spectrum of challenges in healthcare provision for migrants.
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Presenting a comparative study of the UK and Germany, this volume increases our knowledge of a broad spectrum of challenges in healthcare provision for migrants.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 290
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 155mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9780367582470
- ISBN-10: 0367582473
- Artikelnr.: 69891517
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 290
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 231mm x 155mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 454g
- ISBN-13: 9780367582470
- ISBN-10: 0367582473
- Artikelnr.: 69891517
Katja Kuehlmeyer, Dr. rer. biol. hum., is Research Associate at the Institute of Ethics, History and Theory of Medicine at LMU Munich. She works on various topics at the intersection of psychology, health and ethics. Corinna Klingler, MSc, has recently finished here PhD-research on integration of migrant physicians in Germany and is currently working on translational bioethics as a postdoctoral researcher at the QUEST Centre in Berlin. Richard Huxtable, LLB, MA, PhD, is Professor of Medical Ethics and Law and Director of the Centre for Ethics in Medicine, University of Bristol, UK. He works primarily on ethics and law at the end of life, surgical ethics, and clinical ethics support.
Introduction: Ethical, Legal and Social Aspects of Healthcare for Migrants:
Perspectives from the UK and Germany; I. Migrants' Health in Germany and
the UK; 1. Health of Migrants and Ethnic Minorities in Germany: Reflecting
on Normative Agendas; 2. The Health of Migrants in the UK: Evidence and
Implications for Healthcare; 3. Bearing Witness: Observations of the Health
of People without Access to the Regular Healthcare System in Médecins du
Monde's Healthcare and Advocacy Programmes in London and Munich; 4.
Dynamics of informal exclusion: Migrants' Health as experienced in the City
Lab Bochum; II. Migrants' Access to Healthcare; 5. Migrants' Right to
Health in International and European Human Rights Law: Can it still Unfold
its Integrative Dynamic in an Era of Restrictive Immigration Policies?; 6.
Entitlements to Social Health Benefits for Asylum Seekers and Refugees in
Germany; 7. Access and Entitlements for Migrants and Visitors to the UK in
the English National Health Service; 8. The Right to Health for All?
Debates Surrounding Access to Healthcare for Asylum-Seekers in Germany;
III. (Re)constructing Migrants in Health Research; 9. Questioning
Categorisation Practices: 'Migrants' and 'Ethnic Groups' in Public Health
Classification(s); 10. Culturally Sensitive Palliative Care Research: What
Should we Do with 'Those People', or what Should we Do with Ourselves?; 11.
Using Superdiversity as a Lens to View Migrant Health: Reflections on
Ethical and Practical Implications of an Exploratory Study Involving
Community Researchers; IV. Navigating Pluralism in Healthcare; 12.
Challenges in the Provision of Mental Health Care for Refugees in Germany:
a Socially and Culturally Sensitive Approach to Psychological Counselling
and Psychotherapy; 13. Female Genital Alteration in the UK: a Failure of
Pluralism, a Failure of Intersectionality; 14. Integration, Identity and
Elite Migrants: Capturing the Perspectives of Overseas-Trained South Asian
Doctors in the UK; 15. How to Support Migrant Physicians in Navigating
through an Unfamiliar Healthcare System: Findings from a Qualitative
Interview Study; 16. Migrants, Pluralism and End-of-life Decision-making
for Children with Life-limiting Illness: Perspectives on the case of Josip;
Perspectives from the UK and Germany; I. Migrants' Health in Germany and
the UK; 1. Health of Migrants and Ethnic Minorities in Germany: Reflecting
on Normative Agendas; 2. The Health of Migrants in the UK: Evidence and
Implications for Healthcare; 3. Bearing Witness: Observations of the Health
of People without Access to the Regular Healthcare System in Médecins du
Monde's Healthcare and Advocacy Programmes in London and Munich; 4.
Dynamics of informal exclusion: Migrants' Health as experienced in the City
Lab Bochum; II. Migrants' Access to Healthcare; 5. Migrants' Right to
Health in International and European Human Rights Law: Can it still Unfold
its Integrative Dynamic in an Era of Restrictive Immigration Policies?; 6.
Entitlements to Social Health Benefits for Asylum Seekers and Refugees in
Germany; 7. Access and Entitlements for Migrants and Visitors to the UK in
the English National Health Service; 8. The Right to Health for All?
Debates Surrounding Access to Healthcare for Asylum-Seekers in Germany;
III. (Re)constructing Migrants in Health Research; 9. Questioning
Categorisation Practices: 'Migrants' and 'Ethnic Groups' in Public Health
Classification(s); 10. Culturally Sensitive Palliative Care Research: What
Should we Do with 'Those People', or what Should we Do with Ourselves?; 11.
Using Superdiversity as a Lens to View Migrant Health: Reflections on
Ethical and Practical Implications of an Exploratory Study Involving
Community Researchers; IV. Navigating Pluralism in Healthcare; 12.
Challenges in the Provision of Mental Health Care for Refugees in Germany:
a Socially and Culturally Sensitive Approach to Psychological Counselling
and Psychotherapy; 13. Female Genital Alteration in the UK: a Failure of
Pluralism, a Failure of Intersectionality; 14. Integration, Identity and
Elite Migrants: Capturing the Perspectives of Overseas-Trained South Asian
Doctors in the UK; 15. How to Support Migrant Physicians in Navigating
through an Unfamiliar Healthcare System: Findings from a Qualitative
Interview Study; 16. Migrants, Pluralism and End-of-life Decision-making
for Children with Life-limiting Illness: Perspectives on the case of Josip;
Introduction: Ethical, Legal and Social Aspects of Healthcare for Migrants:
Perspectives from the UK and Germany; I. Migrants' Health in Germany and
the UK; 1. Health of Migrants and Ethnic Minorities in Germany: Reflecting
on Normative Agendas; 2. The Health of Migrants in the UK: Evidence and
Implications for Healthcare; 3. Bearing Witness: Observations of the Health
of People without Access to the Regular Healthcare System in Médecins du
Monde's Healthcare and Advocacy Programmes in London and Munich; 4.
Dynamics of informal exclusion: Migrants' Health as experienced in the City
Lab Bochum; II. Migrants' Access to Healthcare; 5. Migrants' Right to
Health in International and European Human Rights Law: Can it still Unfold
its Integrative Dynamic in an Era of Restrictive Immigration Policies?; 6.
Entitlements to Social Health Benefits for Asylum Seekers and Refugees in
Germany; 7. Access and Entitlements for Migrants and Visitors to the UK in
the English National Health Service; 8. The Right to Health for All?
Debates Surrounding Access to Healthcare for Asylum-Seekers in Germany;
III. (Re)constructing Migrants in Health Research; 9. Questioning
Categorisation Practices: 'Migrants' and 'Ethnic Groups' in Public Health
Classification(s); 10. Culturally Sensitive Palliative Care Research: What
Should we Do with 'Those People', or what Should we Do with Ourselves?; 11.
Using Superdiversity as a Lens to View Migrant Health: Reflections on
Ethical and Practical Implications of an Exploratory Study Involving
Community Researchers; IV. Navigating Pluralism in Healthcare; 12.
Challenges in the Provision of Mental Health Care for Refugees in Germany:
a Socially and Culturally Sensitive Approach to Psychological Counselling
and Psychotherapy; 13. Female Genital Alteration in the UK: a Failure of
Pluralism, a Failure of Intersectionality; 14. Integration, Identity and
Elite Migrants: Capturing the Perspectives of Overseas-Trained South Asian
Doctors in the UK; 15. How to Support Migrant Physicians in Navigating
through an Unfamiliar Healthcare System: Findings from a Qualitative
Interview Study; 16. Migrants, Pluralism and End-of-life Decision-making
for Children with Life-limiting Illness: Perspectives on the case of Josip;
Perspectives from the UK and Germany; I. Migrants' Health in Germany and
the UK; 1. Health of Migrants and Ethnic Minorities in Germany: Reflecting
on Normative Agendas; 2. The Health of Migrants in the UK: Evidence and
Implications for Healthcare; 3. Bearing Witness: Observations of the Health
of People without Access to the Regular Healthcare System in Médecins du
Monde's Healthcare and Advocacy Programmes in London and Munich; 4.
Dynamics of informal exclusion: Migrants' Health as experienced in the City
Lab Bochum; II. Migrants' Access to Healthcare; 5. Migrants' Right to
Health in International and European Human Rights Law: Can it still Unfold
its Integrative Dynamic in an Era of Restrictive Immigration Policies?; 6.
Entitlements to Social Health Benefits for Asylum Seekers and Refugees in
Germany; 7. Access and Entitlements for Migrants and Visitors to the UK in
the English National Health Service; 8. The Right to Health for All?
Debates Surrounding Access to Healthcare for Asylum-Seekers in Germany;
III. (Re)constructing Migrants in Health Research; 9. Questioning
Categorisation Practices: 'Migrants' and 'Ethnic Groups' in Public Health
Classification(s); 10. Culturally Sensitive Palliative Care Research: What
Should we Do with 'Those People', or what Should we Do with Ourselves?; 11.
Using Superdiversity as a Lens to View Migrant Health: Reflections on
Ethical and Practical Implications of an Exploratory Study Involving
Community Researchers; IV. Navigating Pluralism in Healthcare; 12.
Challenges in the Provision of Mental Health Care for Refugees in Germany:
a Socially and Culturally Sensitive Approach to Psychological Counselling
and Psychotherapy; 13. Female Genital Alteration in the UK: a Failure of
Pluralism, a Failure of Intersectionality; 14. Integration, Identity and
Elite Migrants: Capturing the Perspectives of Overseas-Trained South Asian
Doctors in the UK; 15. How to Support Migrant Physicians in Navigating
through an Unfamiliar Healthcare System: Findings from a Qualitative
Interview Study; 16. Migrants, Pluralism and End-of-life Decision-making
for Children with Life-limiting Illness: Perspectives on the case of Josip;