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 Vol IV No 2 April-June 2007 (incorporating Issues in Medical Ethics, cumulative Vol XV No II)
EDITORIAL
Medical professionals and the organ trade:an unholy alliance  PDF Aamir Jafarey,
George Thomas,
Aasim Ahmad,
Sandhya Srinivasan
52-53
ARTICLES
Drug promotional practices in Mumbai: a qualitative study  PDF Nobhojit Roy,
Neha Madhiwalla,
Sanjay A Pai
57-61
Restructuring medical education  PDF Padmaja Samant Mavani 62-63
 
COMMENTARY
Start sensitising medical students  PDF Karuna Ramesh 64-64
The importance of patient privacy during a clinical examination  PDF Shailaja Tetali 65-65
HIV/AIDS legislation: an opportunity for health care reform  PDF Vivek Divan, Kajal Bhardwaj 66-67
Working towards ethical organ transplants  PDF Sunil Shroff 68-69
 
INTERNATIONAL ETHICS
Deceased-donor kidney transplantation in Iran: trends, barriers and opportunities  PDF Behzad Einollahi,
Mohammad-Hossein Nourbala,
Saeid Bahaeloo-Horeh,
Shervin Assari,
Mahboob Lessan-Pezeshki,
Naser Simforoosh
70-72
The importance of "throwing money at" the problem of global health  PDF Michael J Selgelid 73-75
 
CASE STUDY
Ethics in nutrition intervention research  PDF 76-77
Response: the study served no purpose  PDF V Raman Kutty 78-78
Response: an  extremely cynical study  PDF Veena Shatrugna 79-80
Response: the study was unjustified and fallacious  PDF GD Ravindran 81-81
Response: research ethics involves continuous learning  PDF Richard A Cash 82-83
 
DOCUMENT
The World Medical Association statement on HIV/AIDS and the medical profession  PDF 84-86
 
SELECTED SUMMARY
The social hierarchy of health  PDF Bashir Mamdani 87-89
BOOK REVIEWS
Outsourcing clinical trials  PDF Sanjay A Pai 90-90
The dawn of a new dysgenics  PDF Mohan Rao 91-91
 
FILM REVIEW
Taking on the taboos  PDF Harshal Pandve 92-92
BOOKS IN BRIEF  PDF 43-43
FROM OTHER JOURNALS   PDF 94-96
CORRESPONDENCE  PDF 97-98

 

The World Social Forum statement on the Global Polio Eradication Initiative

The Second World Social Forum on Health, January 20-25, 2007, condemns the World Health Organisation's lack of transparency in acknowledging the failure of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative strategy and instead

  • identifying a few low-income countries as scapegoats;
  • subjecting the children of these countries to an unprecedentedly high number of Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) through the pulse polio rounds with no concern for its negative impact, and
  • using monovalent OPV, an untested vaccine, without informed consent.

While the WSF on Health acknowledges the place of OPV in the overall immunisation programme as part of integrated public health services, the strategy of intensive pulse polio rounds has had a detrimental fragmenting effect on the already weak public health systems in low-income countries.

We demand an independent review of the Global Polio Eradication strategy with due consideration to the relevant epidemiology and different countries' health care priorities.

Medico Friend Circle (India)

Jan Swasthya Abhiyan (India)

People's Health Movement and

World Social Forum on Health


January 24, 2007

Nairobi, Kenya

PUBLISHING DETAILS
Form IV (See Rule 8)

  1. Place of Publication : Forum for Medical Ethics Society, 0-18, "Bhavna",
    Veer Savarkar Marg, Prabhadevi Mumbai 400025.
  2. Periodicity : Quarterly
  3. Printer's name : Dr Arun Bal Nationality : Indian Address : Flat 6, Mallika, Makrand Housing Society, VS Marg, Mahim, Mumbai 400 016.
  4. Publisher's name : Dr Arun Bal Nationality : Indian Address : Flat 6, Mallika, Makrand Housing Society, SVS Marg, Mahim, Mumbai 400 016.
  5. Editor's name : Dr George Thomas Nationality : Indian Address:  114J Rostrevor Garden, Teynampet, Chennai 600 018

WHAT SHOULD WE DO ABOUT THE ORGAN TRANSPLANT BUSINESS?


CAN WE REGULATE THE ORGAN BUSINESS


Reports that women survivors of the tsunami are being recruited as organ “donors” for the kidney transplant industry in Tamil Nadu have brought the kidney trade back into the limelight. At the same time, Pakistan is in the midst of bringing in an ordinance intended to prevent organ sale and promote a cadaveric transplant programme. The editorial looks at pressures driving the industry and loopholes in the law to regulate it. A comment notes that two central issues need to be addressed: the effectiveness in implementing the current law, and the financial compulsions that make people donate their organs. An article from Iran discusses the government-regulated system for organ donation that provides compensation to donors, and calls for the development of a strong cadaveric programme.

A qualitative study on the range of promotional practices influencing drug usage in Mumbai provided a picture of what might be described as an unholy alliance between drug manufacturers, chemists and doctors. The study is reported in this issue.

An article looks at instances of dysfunctional behaviour in doctors and their causes, and discusses programmes that help doctors deal with stress, work with diverse populations and improve their communication skills.

“HIV/AIDS is global pandemic that has created unprecedented challenges for physicians and health infrastructures,” notes the World Medical Association statement on HIV/AIDS and the medical profession. In India, health infrastructures are sorely tested by and professional associations have not addressed these challenges. We carry in this issue the WMA’s statement on the subject, covering the rights and responsibilities of health care professionals, institutions and medical associations. The authors of a draft bill on HIV/AIDS discuss the need for this legislation and the issues it covers.

The case study describes a study conducted in the early 1970s in which researchers exploring the interaction between malnutrition and infections in children decided to locate groups with a high prevalence of malnutrition and common infections and compare the relative impacts of health care, nutrition, both or neither. Was the control group justified? We carry responses giving different perspectives on this dilemma.





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