Search results (7)
  • Dileep Mavalankar, Bharti Sharma
    Population Council
    1999

    Sterilization is the most popular method of contraception in India. The 1992-93 National Family Health Survey found that of the 36.2 percent of eligible couples using any modern method, most (30.7 percent) had been sterilized and only 5.5 percent were using temporary methods (IIPS 1995).

  • Mohan Rao
    Economic and Political Weekly
    1998

    The quinacrine trials raise a host of questions regarding the safety of this method of sterilization and the methodology used to assess this.

  • 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.

  • Mohan Rao
    Health for Millions
    1997

    Otempora! O mores! This cri decoeur will perhaps be evoked in those reading the spate of reports lately, on surreptitious "trials" on the non-surgical sterilization of women with quinacrine, being carried out by NG0s and private doctors in a host of places in the country.

  • Sunil K. Pandya
    Medical Ethics
    1994

    The Times of India dated 13 January 1994 featured on its front-page news of a tragic event. ‘A sixty-year old advocate... leaped to his death from the eighth floor of the Bombay Hospital and died of multiple injuries... (This followed) the revelation that he was HIV positive ...

  • S.K. Basu
    Social Change
    1993

    The tribal population groups from 7.95 percent of the total population of India. About 67.76 million persons have been enumerated in the country (excluding Jammu & Kashmir) as members of the Scheduled Tribes (1991 census).

  • Radhika Ramasubban

    The focus on mother and child health as a key element in Indian health policy evolved out of what was identified as one of the strongest explanatory factors for continued high fertility, viz., the high infant mortality rates.