The January 2010 issue of PLoS Medicine contains four interesting articles on the "global health system" The articles define what this system is, discusses the role of nations within this larger system and talks about how to strengthen it's effectiveness. These pieces are written by leaders in the field and provide some concrete discussion on a concept that has gained currency over the last few years, that global health is a policy domain of importance and that nations can be thought interlinked as part of a larger "health ecology" when developing policies to address morbidity and mortality the world over.
For more on global health and global health governance, you may want to check out this interview of one of my thesis committee members, Yale University Professor Jennifer Prah Ruger. Her work (linked here) focuses on this broader global health system, linking insights from ethics, politics, policy and economics to understand how and when investments in international health are and should be made.
Finally, for a topical piece on health care worker shortages worldwide, and the role of the United States in alleviating these, see this great essay by Yale medical student (and my former roommate!) Dayo Fadelu.
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