美国远程医疗当前法律障碍的合宪性:其与国家和国际卫生保健改革关系的分析和未来方向。

Amar Gupta, Deth Sao
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国目前的卫生保健危机迫使人们考虑远程医疗在部署务实解决方案方面可能发挥的关键作用。这个国家面临着医疗费用上涨和获得医疗服务以及医疗服务质量的困难。远程医疗可能有助于克服这些挑战,因为它可以提供跨地理距离提供卫生保健的新的具有成本效益和效率的方法。然而,远程医疗的全部好处和未来潜力受到重叠、不一致和不充分的法律和监管框架以及州政府和专业组织强加的一系列标准的限制。这些障碍的支持者声称,它们对保护公众健康和安全是必要的,美国宪法赋予各州对健康和安全问题的专有权。本文认为,这些障碍不仅不能推进这些公共政策目标,而且当它们限制跨州和跨国界的远程医疗实践时,是违宪的。此外,远程医疗的州际和国际性质要求增加联邦政府的集中权力;这一立场与美国宪法和其他治国原则是一致的。最后,本文观察到美国的经验与其他国家有一些相似之处,并且代表了国际社会对制定统一远程医疗制度的需求和努力的一个缩影。就像美国的州政府一样,各国不再能够将医疗保健视为传统的国内问题,必须考虑非传统的选择,以解决成本上升和人民对医疗保健服务不满的困境。
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The constitutionality of current legal barriers to telemedicine in the United States: analysis and future directions of its relationship to national and international health care reform.

The current health care crisis in the United States compels a consideration of the crucial role that telemedicine could play towards deploying a pragmatic solution. The nation faces rising costs and difficulties in access to and quality of medical services. Telemedicine can potentially help to overcome these challenges, as it can provide new cost-effective and efficient methods of delivering health care across geographic distances. The full benefits and future potential of telemedicine, however, are constrained by overlapping, inconsistent, and inadequate legal and regulatory frameworks, as well as the repertoire of standards imposed by state governments and professional organizations. Proponents of these barriers claim that they are necessary to protect public health and safety, and that the U.S. Constitution gives states exclusive authority over health and safety concerns. This Article argues that such barriers not only fail to advance these public policy goals, but are unconstitutional when they restrict the practice of telemedicine across state and national borders. Furthermore, the interstate and international nature of telemedicine calls for increasing the centralized authority of the federal government; this position is consistent with the U.S. Constitution and other governing principles. Finally, this Article observes that the U.S. experience bears some similarities to that of other nations, and represents a microcosm of the international community's need and struggle to develop a uniform telemedicine regime. Just as with state governments in the U.S., nations are no longer able to view health care as a traditional domestic concern and must consider nontraditional options to resolve the dilemmas of rising costs and discontent in the delivery of health care to their people.

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