Improving the Ethical Permissibility of Medical Electives in Lower‐Resource Settings
Published online on January 19, 2026
Abstract
["Developing World Bioethics, EarlyView. ", "\nABSTRACT\nThis paper presents a moral‐theoretical evaluation of medical electives, applying different frameworks of distributive justice to the phenomenon of healthcare students visiting countries with less access to resources in order to bolster their own learning. Currently, discussions of ethical issues around these medical electives largely focuses on issues arising during the placement experience itself, in the form of dilemmas to which an individual must react in an ethical way. Applying different frameworks of distributive justice to the wider issue of how an elective project is designed and organised suggests that electives need to focus a great deal more on conferring benefits to host communities – that is, the communities being visited by students from wealthier settings – than is currently the case. To avoid the charge that medical electives are impermissibly extractive insofar as they impose burdens on host communities that are not justified by appeal to the benefits that the visiting students (or their communities) enjoy, I propose that both students and educators in the healthcare professions consider advocating an offsetting system to compensate host communities for the harms caused by the elective's taking place. The offsetting could comprise a monetary payment, a resolution to work in a lower‐resource setting in the future, or some combination of those two things. While this system may not even be permissible under all the distributive justice frameworks considered, it represents an improvement on the current state of affairs whilst still allowing trainees to gain useful experiences from electives.\n"]