“Almost invisible scars”: medical tourism to Brazil.
【연구 목적】 브라질이 세계적 의료 관광 및 미용 성형외과 중심지로 부상한 배경을 분석한다.
APA
Edmonds A (2011). “Almost invisible scars”: medical tourism to Brazil.. Signs, 36(2), 297-302. https://doi.org/10.1086/655909
MLA
Edmonds A. "“Almost invisible scars”: medical tourism to Brazil.." Signs, vol. 36, no. 2, 2011, pp. 297-302.
PMID
21114074
DOI
10.1086/655909
Abstract
Along with a handful of other nations in the developing world, Brazil has emerged as a top destination for medical tourism. Drawing on the author's ethnographic fieldwork in plastic surgery wards, this article examines diverse factors - some explicitly promoted in medical marketing and news sources, others less visible - contributing to Brazil's international reputation for excellence in cosmetic plastic surgery. Brazil's plastic surgery residency programs, some of which are housed within its public health system, attract overseas surgeons, provide ample opportunities for valuable training in cosmetic techniques, and create a clinical environment that favors experimentation with innovative techniques. Many graduates of these programs open private clinics that, in turn, attract overseas patients. High demand for Brazilian plastic surgery also reflects an expansive notion of female health that includes sexual realization, mental health, and cosmetic techniques that manage reproduction. Medical tourism is sometimes represented as being market-driven: patients in wealthier nations travel to obtain quality services at lower prices. This article ends by reflecting on how more complex local and transnational dynamics also contribute to demand for elective medical procedures such as cosmetic surgery.
MeSH Terms
Beauty Culture; Brazil; Cosmetic Techniques; Developing Countries; Health Care Costs; Health Services; History, 20th Century; History, 21st Century; Marketing; Medical Tourism; Surgery, Plastic