Journal of the Forum for Medical Ethics Society Since 1993

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Current Issue
Vol IX No. 1
Jan - Mar 2012


Recent Issues



Indian Journal of Medical Ethics Volume 11 Number 2 April-June 2003
   
 
EDITORIAL
Who speaks for the children of Iraq? Zulfiqar Ahmed Bhutta
 
CONTROVERSY
ECT without anaesthesia is unethical Aparna Waikar, Bhargavi Davar, et al
ECT: a measured defence Chittaranjan Andrade
 
INTERNATIONAL ETHICS
Ethics and health at the World Health Organization Alexander Morgan Capron, Nikola Biller-Andorno
 
RESEARCH ETHICS
Cultural barriers, 'competence' and informed consent in population-based surveys Sunita Bandewar
 
ARTICLES
Treating genetic disorders: challenges and recommendations Rajesh Behl
Taking biotechnology to the patient: at what cost D Varatharajan
The baby business Sandhya Srinivasan
 
VIEW POINT
Why I don't believe in referral commission Arun Sheth
 
LETTER
Bangalore: falling standards in the profession Anant Bhan
 
INSPIRING LIVES
There is no greater gift than the opportunity to work in a government hospital A S Thambiah
 
CONFERENCE REPORT
Suicide prevention strategies Anant Bhan
 
BOOK REVIEW
A chronicle of war and medicine Sanjay A Pai
Correspondence
From the press
From other journals
Activities report
Announcements

CHALLENGES AND CONTROVERSIES
The invasion of Iraq is expected to kill several hundred thousand people both directly and through the breakdown of an already enfeebled health system. The editorial points to the injustice of spending billions of dollars on war while depriving essential health programmes of funds. An article in our January issue supporting the use of electroconvulsive therapy without anaesthesia has drawn a sharp response. We carry both points of view for our readers and welcome discussion to further a debate on this important subject. A report on the Ethics and Health Unit of the WHO, established in October 2002, describes the challenges it faces and its plans for the future. A researcher discusses the barriers posed by language and culture when ensuring informed consent in survey research. Genetic technology is opening up a host of new possibilities for diagnosis and treatment but the cost of these new technologies pose their own ethical dilemmas. A doctor and a health economist discuss the subject from their different perspectives.

South Asia Medical Ethics on-line
The South Asian Medical Ethics e-group is co-ordinated by members of the Bioethics Group of the Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan, and the Forum for Medical Ethics Society, Mumbai, India. SAME was set up following the development of a number of informal contacts across the sub-continent. It is meant to respond to the need to promote discussion on issues in medical ethics in this part of the world, to exchange ideas, provoke meaningful debate, and strengthen valuable relationships between the people of our countries. We hope that you will find this discussion meaningful, contribute with your own experiences, press reports and comments on issues in medical ethics, and forward this invitation to friends and colleagues in this region.


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