SEARCH RESULT

Total Matching Records found : 1504

New drug policy by mid-November, Government tells Supreme Court -J Venkatesan

-The Hindu People have to go hungry for paying the Medicine bill, says Judge The Union government on Thursday told the Supreme Court that it would put in place by mid-November a Drug Price Control Order (DPCO) after the Union Cabinet’s approval. Last week, the Bench asked the government to spell out a time frame within which a new policy would be put in place. On Thursday, Additional Solicitor-General (ASG) Siddarth Luthra told a...

More »

SC gives govt time till Nov 27 for final drug pricing policy -Utkarsh Anand

-The Indian Express The Supreme Court on Thursday gave one month’s time to the Centre to come up with the final version of the drug pricing policy. Maintaining that the Centre must follow a pricing formula that will prevent the prices of the drugs from shooting up, the SC agreed to wait till mid-November for the Cabinet to come up with its final version of the new pricing policy. “Drugs prescribed by doctors......

More »

Include the poor in biodiversity conservation -Lise Grande

-The Hindu Intelligent management of ecosystems can help to turn local economies around and give destitute households a chance to increase their incomes Protecting biodiversity is humanity’s insurance policy against the unprecedented biodiversity loss and ecosystem degradation which has occurred in recent decades, undermining the very foundations of life on earth. This is why this week’s 11th Conference of Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity in Hyderabad, which India is hosting, is...

More »

The dark underbelly of India’s clinical trials business-Malia Politzer and Vidya Krishnan

-Live Mint Incidents at Bhopal and Indore highlight irregularities and ethical violations in some trials In 2004, doctors at the Bhopal Memorial Hospital and Research Centre (BMHRC), established exclusively for treating the victims of the 1984 gas leak, recruited unsuspecting survivors for clinical trials without their knowledge or consent; 14 participants died during the course of the trials. Together with the episode in Indore’s Maharaja Yashwantrao Hospital (that Mint reported on 10...

More »

Clinical trials: Regulating chaos-Vidya Krishnan and Malia Politzer

-Live Mint The first in a two-part series examining the opaque world of clinical trials in India  A hospital in Indore has been able to get away with unethical medical trials in which 32 people have died over five years, according to the state government. This despite several investigations, a state government ban and Supreme Court strictures—a classic example of the lawless nature of the clinical trial business in India.   Lata Mehra, who...

More »

Video Archives

Archives

share on Facebook
Twitter
RSS
Feedback
Read Later

Contact Form

Please enter security code
      Close