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brianwang

Transhuman and life extension medicine could be established in overseas healthcare havens

reposted from Advancednano.

Here is an article about outsourcing healthcare

 
With an estimated 45 million uninsured Americans, some 500,000 trekked overseas last year for medical treatment, according to the National Coalition on Health Care. Asian hospitals in Thailand, India and Singapore have long been swarmed by medical tourists looking for tummy tucks and face lifts, but many glitzy, marble-floored facilities are now gaining reputations for big-ticket procedures including heart surgery, knee and back operations.

This could also be a means of circumventing the Food and Drug Administrations 19 year drug approval process. A country could work with global drug and insurance companies to create a system of more advanced healthcare without restrictions from using newly discovered effective or promising approaches. Stem cells and regenerative treatments as well as life extension could be developed overseas with lower costs and fewer unnecessary delays. There would still be incentives to not apply treatments in a reckless fashion (too many people with bad results would be bad for future business).

Just as several small countries and states became tax and business havens with highly streamlined corporate laws and rules were created by lawyers and accountants, healthcare companies could create advanced healthcare havens.

The healthcare havens could also be used for the advancement and implementation of transhuman and life extension medicine.
 

Published Thursday, November 02, 2006 1:25 PM by brianwang

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Abolitionist wrote on November 3, 2006 8:55 AM

It might be viewed as elitist by some, but it would help get the ball rolling if a Transhumanist clinic that provides cutting edge medical treatments not normally available could be founded in a country that is sympathetic.

Cuba?

 

Gully Foyle wrote on November 3, 2006 4:04 PM

Maybe Moscow, Russia:

http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,66904,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_6

And another article that adds Barbados and Rotterdam to the list:

http://www.theage.com.au/news/beauty/stem-cell-therapy/2006/10/09/1160246045852.html

If the rich are willing to be guinea pigs, I say let them.

If, in America, a woman can have an abortion for any reason whatsoever, including something frivolous, like avoiding getting stretch marks; why can't another woman have an abortion to help get rid of someone else's stretch marks?

 

Maestro949 wrote on November 5, 2006 8:16 PM

Today it's medical vacations to save money, tomorrow it'll be because the treatments will not be illegal in several other countries.

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About brianwang

long time futurist (he won second place in the Honeywell University Futurist contest). He has been involved in nanotechnology as a senior associate of the Foresight Institute from 1997-2005 and a regular member from 1994-1997. He helped write the 2003 Foresight Institute organization relaunch plan. He is now a member of the Center for Responsible Nanotechnology taskforce.
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