Journal of the Forum for Medical Ethics Society Since 1993

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Current Issue
Vol VII No. 1
Jan - Mar 2010


Recent Issues



Indian Journal of Medical Ethics Vol V No 1 Jan-Mar 2008 (incorporating Issues in Medical Ethics, cumulative Vol XVI No I)
EDITORIAL
The Thorat Committee Report and the good doctor
George Thomas
Medical tourism in India: winners and losers Amit Sen Gupta
INTERVIEW
Trade secrets from a sperm bank in India
Jyotsna Agnihotri Gupta
COMMENTS
Comment on 'Trade secrets from a sperm bank in India'
Manisha Gupte
Stem cell transplantation in India: tall claims, questionable ethics Sunil K Pandya
Medical ethics education in India G D Ravindran
Black money in white coats: whither medical ethics? Subrata Chattopadhyay
RESEARCH ETHICS
Fieldwork and social science research ethics
Qudsiya Contractor
INTERNATIONAL ETHICS
Therapeutic drug use in Bangladesh: policy versus practice
Mohammad Saidul Islam
The informed consent status for surgery patients in eastern Turkey: a cross-sectional study Mucahit Egri, Osman Celbis, Mehmet Karaca, Bora Ozdemir Ahmet Nezih Kok
NATIONAL BIOETHICS CONFERENCE 2007
Bioethics and ayurveda
M S Valiathan
Medicine, ethics and the law N R Madhava Menon
Conference report Sridevi Seetharam
Comments from participants
SELECTED SUMMARY
When a doctor makes a mistake
Bashir Mamdani
BOOK REVIEW
"Is that a fact?" Medical history revisited
Sanjay A Pai
FILM REVIEW
Heaven on earth?
Neha Madhiwalla
FROM THE PRESS
BOOKS IN BRIEF
FROM OTHER JOURNALS
CORRESPONDENCE

Government policy and medical practice
The character of the medical profession, the manner in which medicine  is practised today and the direction of healthcare are shaped by our  environment with all its inequities of caste, class and gender. This character,  this manner and this direction are reinforced by the messages conveyed in the  medical education system, by the incentives of the new economic policies and  by the actions - or inaction - of regulatory authorities.  Such an understanding is expressed in various ways in this issue. An editorial  writer comments on the Sukhdeo Thorat Committee report documenting  faculty inaction against caste-based harassment of students in the All India  Institute of Medical Sciences. That the caste and other inequities reinforced in  medical school are expressed in medical practice is illustrated in an interview  with the director of a sperm bank; parents demand - and doctors arrange - sperm of the desired caste and economic background.  The second editorial describes how the inequities in this environment are  reinforced by the government. As private medical care grows it seeks foreign  markets; hence the policy to promote "medical tourism" with tax breaks and other  incentives - even as the vast majority of poor Indians have no access to healthcare

Stem cell "therapy" is another example of an industry promoted by the  government policy of turning a blind eye to its unregulated proliferation.  A commentary writer documents the unjustified claims that prompt the  desperate to spend their life savings in the hope of being cured of a serious  disease. Doctors undertake experiments with neither scientific basis nor  ethical clearance in the name of treatment. Regulatory authorities indicate their inability - or unwillingness - to take  action against unethical practices. Another commentary writer describing his  encounters with corruption in medical practice points out that corruption has  infiltrated the profession at every level, including those agencies meant to  enforce ethical practice. Those who benefit from the existing system - within  medical practice and in society in general - have every interest in maintaining  the current state of affairs. More than 500 health professionals, researchers, policy makers and students  attended the Indian Journal of Medical Ethics Second National Bioethics  Conference in Bangalore. We carry a report on the conference and comments  from participants.



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