| Indian Journal of Medical Ethics | ||||||
![]() Home Current Issue Past Issues Support About IJME Jan-Mar1995-3(1) |
Ethics of professional bodies Anil Pilgaokar Health - a matter of commerce Alarmingly, health is now a matter of commerce, where concern for profits overshadow all other considerations. Welfare, as an important aspect of health care, is neglected by the State and has, by default, been passed on to voluntary agencies. The new economic policies, liberalising the ‘health market’, without effective and meaningful regulation, are already proving disastrous for patients. Professional bodies and medical ethics : Indian Pharmacological Society (IPS) Illogical drug combinations One would also expect the IPS to exert itself openly in trying to usher in such practices as Prescription Audit. Model drug regimens for common ailments ought to have been publicised long ago. These would have served as the standard against which actual prescriptions and procedures issued by doctors could have been checked for fair and objective audit. The IPS has failed to make any effort in this direction or in ensuring participation by the State. and institutions in this important exercise. Irrational use of drugs The issue of licenses for the manufacture of drugs only to companies producing rational drugs and an effective Prescription Audit programme can certainly reduce the misuse of drugs but cannot substitute for the education of the public on rational treatment. Physicians bear the prime responsibility here but the professional bodies also have an important role in guiding the public on such important issues. Recent programs on BBC’s World Service Television showed the concern of professional agencies in the United Kingdom and America on such issues as the futility of ‘non- food vitamins’ and risks from mercury amalgams in dental fillings. Periodic, official updates are provided to the public by the various professional bodies in these countries on such issues. Why do our professional organisations drag their feet and neglect their duties? Anil Pilgaokar,34- B Naushir Bharucha Road, Mumbai 400 007.
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