Article

Medical Tourism and Reproductive Outsourcing: The Dawning of a New Paradigm for Healthcare

International Journal of Fertility and Women's Medicine · 45(1):41-47 · 2005
DOI: 10.1136/medethics-2017-104515
Vincent Couture et al.
Vincent CoutureRégen DrouinJean-Marie MoutquinPatricia MonnierChantal Bouffard

Cross-border reproductive care (CBRC) can be defined as the movement from one jurisdiction to another for medically assisted reproduction (MAR). CBRC raises many ethical concerns that have been addressed extensively. However, the conclusions are still based on scarce evidence even considering the global scale of CBRC. Empirical ethics appears as a way to foster this ethical reflection on CBRC while attuning it with the experiences of its main actors. To better understand the 'in and out' situation of CBRC in Canada, we conducted an ethnographic study taking a 'critically applied ethics' approach. This article presents a part of the findings of this research, obtained by data triangulation from qualitative analysis of pertinent literature, participant observation in two Canadian fertility clinics and 40 semidirected interviews. Based on participants' perceptions, four themes emerged: (1) inconsistencies of the Canadian legal framework; (2) autonomy and the necessity to resort to CBRC; (3) safety and the management of CBRC individual risks; and (4) justice and solidarity. The interaction between these four themes highlights the problematic of 'reproductive outsourcing' that characterised the Canadian situation, a system where the controversial aspects of MAR are knowingly pushed outside the borders.

Aimwell Signal Relevance AIMWELL EDITORIAL

This publication published in International Journal of Fertility and Women's Medicine represents peer-reviewed research in Canada, Fertility Clinics, Humans directly relevant to Aimwell’s evidence intelligence infrastructure. It contributes to the FHIN network’s knowledge base on Canada and supports data-driven clinical decision making for Aimwell member organizations.

CanadaFertility ClinicsHumansMedical TourismOutsourced ServicesReproductive Techniques, Assisted

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DOI / Publisher PubMed

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References46
Published2005

Source attribution: PubMed / NCBI · CrossRef

Retrieved: May 21, 2026

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