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1.
Indian J Med Ethics ; 2018 OCT; 3(4): 337
Article | IMSEAR | ID: sea-195152

ABSTRACT

“Sustaining for-profit emergency healthcare services in low resource areas” by Jain et al is an excellent reply to the Bawaskars. Clearly, the state must prevent both patients from going bankrupt and practitioners from running into negative balances.

2.
Indian J Med Ethics ; 2012 Oct-Dec;9 (4):292
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-181428

ABSTRACT

In July 2011 Nature carried a Comment titled “Grand Challenges to Global Mental Health”announcing research priorities to benefit people with mental illness around the world. The essay called for urgent action and investment. However, many professionals, academics, and service user advocate organisations were concerned about the assumptions embedded in the approaches advocated and the potential for the project to do more harm than good as a result. Nature refused to print a letter (sent on 20th August 2011) protesting against the issue, citing ‘lack of space’ as the reason. This letter is an effort to critique the initiative through wide participation and consensus

3.
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-135494

ABSTRACT

India has over a century old tradition of development and production of vaccines. The Government rightly adopted self-sufficiency in vaccine production and self-reliance in vaccine technology as its policy objectives in 1986. However, in the absence of a full-fledged vaccine policy, there have been concerns related to demand and supply, manufacture vs. import, role of public and private sectors, choice of vaccines, new and combination vaccines, universal vs. selective vaccination, routine immunization vs. special drives, cost-benefit aspects, regulatory issues, logistics etc. The need for a comprehensive and evidence based vaccine policy that enables informed decisions on all these aspects from the public health point of view brought together doctors, scientists, policy analysts, lawyers and civil society representatives to formulate this policy paper for the consideration of the Government. This paper evolved out of the first ever ICMR-NISTADS national brainstorming workshop on vaccine policy held during 4-5 June, 2009 in New Delhi, and subsequent discussions over email for several weeks, before being adopted unanimously in the present form.


Subject(s)
Budgets , Decision Support Systems, Clinical , Evidence-Based Medicine , Humans , Immunization Programs , India , /economics
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