Search results (32)
  • Nirantar Trust
    Nirantar Trust
    2015

  • Farah Baria
    India Today
    1999

    The Radiologist Peered into his ultrasound scanner and beamed. "Congratulations, "he announced. "It's a girl." Rajendra Jain could feel his heart sink. Two daughters already and now another on the way. He glanced furtively

  • Bella C. Patel, M. E. Khan, R. B. Gupta
    Population Council
    1999

    It is important to understand the social, physical, and administrative environment in which the grassroots components of a health program function and provide services.

  • Abdur Razzaque, M. Maiharut Islam, Nurul Alam
    Asia-Pacific Population Journal
    1998

    One of the purposes of family planning programmes in developing countries is to provide for the unmet needs of couples for contraception.

  • U.S. Mishra, T.K. Roy, S. Irudaya Rajan
    The Journal of Family Welfare
    1998

    Contraception as a behavioral phenomenon has been the focus of many population researches, during the last half a century. In fact, explaining contraceptive behavior is a complex theoretical effort. Learning, motivation,

  • Sandhya Srinivasan
    Issues in Medical Ethics
    1998

    Recent publicity about unethical trials raises a number of questions about research in developing countries.

  • Ganapati Mudur
    British Medical Journal
    1997

    Doctors in India are questioning the ethics of a study which observed the natural course of precancerous uterine cervical lesions without treatment in women who had not given written consent to take part.

  • Contraception
    ICMR Bulletin
    1997

    A woman would prefer to prevent an unwanted pregnancy rather than having an abortion or carrying the pregnancy to term. No amount of legal or religious restrictions, social stigma or lack of access to professional care can stop her if she decides to seek termination of an unplanned pregnancy.

  • Prahbhjot Malhi, Jagat Jerath
    Guru Nanak Journal of Sociology
    1997

    The paper uses the National Family Health Survey (NFHS, 1992-93) data to examine the extent to which sex preferences have constrained the success of the family planning programme and inhibited the acceptance of contraception in the different states of the country.

  • Shubanker Banerjee
    Social Change
    1997

    In the year 1950, injectable contraceptives were developed (containing only progestin). For the treatment of endometriosis and endometrial cancer as well as of painful menstrual periods, (dysmenorrhoea), excessive hair growth (hirsutism), and bleeding disorders, progestins were finally used.