Author: phmindia_jsa

Junior Doctors in Line of fire in Maharshtra

Since the attack on resident doctor Rohan Mhamunkar in Dhule on March 12, there has been a spate of attacks on frontline doctors working in public hospitals across the state of Maharashtra. The government has treated this purely as a law and order problem. What has not been highlighted sufficiently in the public debate so far, is the correlation between understaffed and inadequately resourced public hospitals, and the growing discontent among patients seeking care in these hospitals. Read this analysis by Abhay Shukla.

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Abnormal Rise in Caesarean Sections

The commercialisation of caesarean deliveries, especially in private hospitals, hit the headlines recently following an online petition. It was further highlighted when Women and Child Welfare Minister Maneka Gandhi asked the Ministry of Health to ensure that hospitals make public the number of caesarean births. Figures for C-section deliveries are alarming, putting a question mark on the possible unethical practices prevalent in private hospitals. Read full article by Chhaya Pachauli.

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Use of Pellet Guns Has Caused a Public Health Crisis in Kashmir

In addition to being a violation of human rights, the continued use of pellet guns has meant an incredible amount of pressure on the state’s public health care system and medical professional “I was returning home after visiting my sister when people told me there was some disturbance on the very road that I had to take… There was a lot of commotion, stones flying around, lots of angry crowds and forces… I was told not to go further. But I had to return. The children were alone at home. I waited for a while. All of a sudden something hit me, I don’t know what. I couldn’t see anything and I cannot describe to you the pain… ” ∼ A 22-year-old woman who was caught in crossfire and hit by pellets, and lost her vision. Read full article by N.Sarojini.

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National Health Policy 2017: Reactions

The government of India announced the new National Health Policy 2017 after a draft was in circulation for over 18 months. The policy can be downloaded here and the  situation analysis here. There have been several reactions to the new policy that have been contributed to by JSA members and associated friends which have been published in different media outlets.  They are available here: Scroll.in; The Wire; Newsclick; DNA; The WIRE; DNA; IJME; Hindu Business Line; Prajavani (Kannada); Mathrubhumi (Malayalam)

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Open Letter to Chhattisgarh CM asking for prosecution of Doctor responsible for sterilization deaths in 2014

Signatories express shock and dismay regarding dropping of criminal proceedings against surgeon R. K. Gupta, who was responsible for sterilisation deaths in Chhattisgarh in 2014. Read the full statement here. Read the earlier report on the sterilisation tragedy here.

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Health groups welcome price fixation of cardiac stents by NPPA

Health groups welcomed the notification by the National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority (NPPA) of ceiling prices for coronary stents. The NPPA has notified a ceiling price for Drug Eluting Stents (DES) at Rs.29,600 and for Bare Metal Stents (BMS) at Rs.7,260 under the provisions of paragraph 19 of the Drugs Prices Control Order, 2013…read full statement here. Read recent articles on the issue here and here. Also read the notification by NPPA here..

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In budget 2017, Arun Jaitley gave flailing public health programs little hope

At a time when the country is grappling with perilous effects of demonetisation, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley was expected to be sensitive to the suffering of millions of Indians and enhance the social safety nets in the form of expansion of employment, education, health, food and nutrition. He has, instead, made some nominal increases in the rural sector and offered tax sops to the middle class. This increase in allocation appears mere tokenism when we compare it to price increases and expenditure cutbacks over last few years… Read the full article (Courtesy Scroll.in)

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Curbing malnutrition: What works in Africa doesn’t quite in India

Packaged fortified food, which showed remarkable results in treating children with Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM) in Africa, has proved much less effective in a trial conducted in India. This has prompted concerned paediatricians and nutritionists to write a letter to the prime minister cautioning against “quick fixes” of buying commercial products instead of focusing on sustainable measures such as care support for mothers, clean drinking water and food security….  read whole story …(courtesy Times of India)

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