Global

Maximizing an Educational Investment: American Medical Students in the Developing World
By Peyton Hassinger
Published: February / March 2008 | Vol. 01 No. 02
Each year, the developing world buys stock in American medical students. Is this a smart buy? How can we make their investment worthwhile?

Electronic Waste: An Unspoken Global Epidemic
By Matthew Warner
Published: February / March 2008 | Vol. 01 No. 02
As a society rooted in technical advancement, the production of electronic equipment has become one of the largest and fastest growing global manufacturing industries.1  While the benefits provided by electronic devices are obvious and omnipresent, the negative effects associated with their disposal are often neglected.  Current recycling programs for electronic waste (e-waste) in developed nations are incomplete, serving largely as waste redistribution systems that are driven by domestic hazardous waste restrictions and asymmetric international trade regulations.  As a result, e-waste recycling centers are concentrated in poor, underdeveloped regions of the world.  The methods employed are crude and unregulated with devastating effects on both human health and the environment.  This article aims to bring this important public health, social justice, economic, and environmental issue to the attention of young healthcare professionals.

Lessons from Kenya: A Perspective on Global Health
By Molly Paras
Published: December / January 2008 | Vol. 01 No. 01
In recent times, figures such as Dr. Paul Farmer and Bill and Melinda Gates have brought the issue of global health to the center of the world's attention. One medical student reflects on her own contributions to global health and considers ways in which to be more effective and conscientious in contributing to the field.

E/W
By Scott Thompson
Published: December / January 2008 | Vol. 01 No. 01
An examination of the differences between the Eastern and Western conceptions of pharmacy.

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