Search results (12)
  • Zakia Soman, Noorjehan Safia Niaz
    UN Women
    2014

  • 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

  • Sandhya Srinivasan
    Issues in Medical Ethics
    1998

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

  • Sunil K. Pandya
    Issues in Medical Ethics
    1997

    Persons testing positive for infection by HIV or showing evidence of AIDS provoke revulsion and fear in medical doctors. These reactions stem from the general knowledge that the diagnosis of AIDS is akin to a death sentence and the belief that a positive HIV test is, inevitably.

  • 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.

  • Kannamma
    Wardha
    1996

    There is a widespread feeling that there has been a general erosion of ethical standards even in professions, which have been considered 'noble'. This has prompted a soul-searching exercise to understand the problems involved.

  • Anil Pilgaokar
    Issues in Medical Ethics
    1996

    Modern medical practice is by its very nature an interventionist one and in principle, all medical interventions need the informed consent of the patient to be ethically correct.

  • R. P. Ravindra
    Issues in Medical Ethics
    1994

    Ethics is an important yet neglected issue in the field of medicine. When discussed, it provokes controversy. In the West we find conscious and continuous debate on this subject. Ethics is not a forbidden word there nor are

  • P M Bakshi
    The Lawyers
    1993

    Some ten percent of marriages are said to be infertile. As cures for infertility have had very limited success, methods of artificial conception are fast gaining ground. The use of these methods, however, gives rise to legal and moral issues. P. M.

  • Preeti Mehra
    Illustrated Weekly of India
    1992

    Nearly 10 per cent of the women on whom the sub-dermal contraceptive Norplant was experimented cannot be traced. Did these women know that this device had been abandoned in the USA? Did anyone bother to get their informed consent of being experimented on?