| Indian Journal of Medical Ethics | ||||||
![]() Home Current Issue Past Issues Support About IJME Oct-Dec2001-9(4) |
FMES activities: some highlights
In January, some of us attended a workshop at the
Sri Chitra Tirunal Institute of Medical Sciences and Technology, on research
ethics in South Asia. Over five days, a variety of subjects related to research
ethics were covered through lectures and case study discussions. Discussions
were lively, reflecting the level of interest in the subject for a small but
signficant group of professionals. At this meeting we also made contact with doctors
at the Aga Khan University in Karachi, who are actively involved in running a
number of ethics-related programmes in the hospital. In July one of us attended
a workshop in Karachi on research ethics. The visit was an eye-opener in terms
of the extent of discussion on ethics within Aga Khan University. It was also a
wonderful experience to be welcomed with such overwhelming hospitality. There
are so many strong bonds between the two countries. As a result of these two
meetings, we hope to develop a sustained dialogue on medical ethics in South
Asia. On July 1, we participated in a workshop where
representatives of the government, medical associations, consumer groups,
insurance companies and health activists discussed proposed amendments to the
Bombay Nursing Home Registration Act, 1949, one of the oldest Acts to regulate
nursing homes. The revised Act, to be called the Maharashtra Clinical
Establishments Act, will cover all private and public hospitals, diagnostic
centres, laboratories and medical practitioners of all systems, in the state.
Members also helped organise and speak at two
workshops, and came to recognise how effective these programmes are to reach out
to the medical community. A two-day workshop under the auspices of the Academy
for Medical Sciences in Nagpur, was received with enthusiasm by
participants. A one-day workshop for students of the health and
development course at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences was equally lively,
with heated discussions. Doctors and students were willing to give up
their Sundays to sit through lectures on ethics. We hope to hold more such
programmes in the future. Finally, the latest on the labour of love: a CD ROM
with eight volumes of Issues in Medical Ethics is available at an introductory
price of Rs 300 - a steal, considering the amount of valuable information and
comment from eight years of the journal. You can send your money order or cheque
(with appropriate additions for out-station cheques) to our office for a copy of
the CD. You can also look at the journal atwww.medicalethicsindia.org.
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