India has played a crucial role in making essential medicines available and affordable for patients in the developing world through generic drugs. This has been possible by linking India’s patent policies and laws to public interest. Similarly, policies that align public funded R&D in India with public health have the potential to provide incentives to the development of medical technologies (Vaccines, diagnostics and medicines) crucial for treating neglected diseases like...
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India urges WHO to clarify on A (H1N1) pandemic
India has asked the World Health Organisation to explain media reports that the A (H1N1) influenza is a false pandemic. Making an intervention at the WHO Executive Board meeting, now on in Geneva, Union Health and Family Welfare Secretary K. Sujatha Rao said such reports were adversely impacting the public health measures being taken by countries. She called for greater transparency in the terms and conditions on which international manufacturers were...
More »Changing lifestyle choices an enduring challenge for improving global health – UN
Despite progress on many fronts to improve global health, the world still faces persistent challenges, from insufficient funding and capacity to the resistance by many to make needed lifestyle changes, the head of the United Nations health agency warned today. “Persuading people to adopt healthy behaviours is one of the biggest challenges in public health,” UN World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Margaret Chan told the agency’s Executive Board at the...
More »Polio vaccine
A new type of oral polio vaccine will be introduced in the country tomorrow as part of the campaign to eradicate polio, which has stubbornly resisted more than a decade of mass immunisation efforts based on orally administered Vaccines. The bivalent vaccine is intended to immunise children against two types of wild polio viruses -- P1 and P3 -- that have persisted in India. A third type of the wild...
More »Health ministry to import 1.5 million doses of H1N1 vaccine by Radhieka Pandeya
The health ministry has placed an order to import 1.5 million doses of the swine flu vaccine into India, which will be available in January. This is contrary to the government’s earlier claims of importing four million doses of the vaccine. Indian manufacturers will now supply the remaining doses. “We have placed an order for importing 1.5 million doses already,” said Vineet Chawdhry, joint secretary, health ministry. “Indigenous production of...
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