A case of medical tourism?

The reception of foreign patients in Sfax (Tunisia) in exclusively private healthcare facilities raises questions about the place of medical tourism in patient-caregiver relationships. While medical tourism is a decried notion, it is above all part of an economic and globalized vision of health exch...

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Main Authors: Théo Maurette, Sami Ben Fguira
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Association Via@ 2022-08-01
Series:Via@
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/viatourism/8590
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author Théo Maurette
Sami Ben Fguira
author_facet Théo Maurette
Sami Ben Fguira
author_sort Théo Maurette
collection DOAJ
description The reception of foreign patients in Sfax (Tunisia) in exclusively private healthcare facilities raises questions about the place of medical tourism in patient-caregiver relationships. While medical tourism is a decried notion, it is above all part of an economic and globalized vision of health exchanges. Mobilities for medical reasons are local and constrained rather than chosen, within a global market. However, the case of Sfax shows that medical tourism is also a specific governmentality, constructed by supply and demand, outside the standards of mass tourism. First of all, informal practices surrounding care produce a form of “desire” for Sfax, also embedded in the neoliberal context surrounding the development of this activity. This gives the biopolitical reading a transcalar and analytical force of the phenomenon of medical tourism, within transnational care spaces.
format Article
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institution Kabale University
issn 2259-924X
language deu
publishDate 2022-08-01
publisher Association Via@
record_format Article
series Via@
spelling doaj-art-dfd1c6321e244cb7b80913f8948f7e592025-01-30T14:05:19ZdeuAssociation Via@Via@2259-924X2022-08-012110.4000/viatourism.8590A case of medical tourism?Théo MauretteSami Ben FguiraThe reception of foreign patients in Sfax (Tunisia) in exclusively private healthcare facilities raises questions about the place of medical tourism in patient-caregiver relationships. While medical tourism is a decried notion, it is above all part of an economic and globalized vision of health exchanges. Mobilities for medical reasons are local and constrained rather than chosen, within a global market. However, the case of Sfax shows that medical tourism is also a specific governmentality, constructed by supply and demand, outside the standards of mass tourism. First of all, informal practices surrounding care produce a form of “desire” for Sfax, also embedded in the neoliberal context surrounding the development of this activity. This gives the biopolitical reading a transcalar and analytical force of the phenomenon of medical tourism, within transnational care spaces.https://journals.openedition.org/viatourism/8590geographyTunisiabiopoliticsmobilitymedical tourismtransnational care space
spellingShingle Théo Maurette
Sami Ben Fguira
A case of medical tourism?
Via@
geography
Tunisia
biopolitics
mobility
medical tourism
transnational care space
title A case of medical tourism?
title_full A case of medical tourism?
title_fullStr A case of medical tourism?
title_full_unstemmed A case of medical tourism?
title_short A case of medical tourism?
title_sort case of medical tourism
topic geography
Tunisia
biopolitics
mobility
medical tourism
transnational care space
url https://journals.openedition.org/viatourism/8590
work_keys_str_mv AT theomaurette acaseofmedicaltourism
AT samibenfguira acaseofmedicaltourism
AT theomaurette caseofmedicaltourism
AT samibenfguira caseofmedicaltourism