About the IJME Ethics Award
The FMES/IJME has been working for over 25 years towards bringing ethical concerns in healthcare to prominence and inculcating ethics in healthcare practices and policies. It has organised six biennial National Bioethics Conferences (NBCs) and linked up with healthcare institutions and policy makers to create a space for public deliberation on ethical healthcare with the participation of people and civil-society organisations. Numerous individuals and organisations have, over the years, with their dedication and collective efforts, made ethics a part of the public discourse on healthcare practices, research, and policy in India.
At present, there are insufficient avenues to recognise and honour individuals for their contribution to healthcare ethics and bioethics in India. The FMES/IJME has, therefore, decided to institute a regular bioethics award that could help encourage role models for the practice of ethics in healthcare. One or more such bioethics awards will be conferred every two years, at the opening plenary session of the NBC.
The first Bioethics Award will be conferred on December 5, 2018 at the 7th National Bioethics Conference, jointly organised with the International Association of Bioethics’ 14th World Congress of Bioethics, from December 5 to 7, 2018, at St. John’s National Academy of Health Sciences, Bengaluru, This award is supported by the Elsevier Foundation.
The IJME Ethics Award 2018
The theme for the IJME Ethics Award 2018 is:
Outstanding Contribution to Ethical Practices and Improving Access to Healthcare for the Marginalised
This theme has been chosen for the inaugural IJME Ethics Award since it falls within the ambit of the theme of the joint 14th World Congress of Bioethics and 7th National Bioethics Conference, the platform for the award-giving ceremony. The award will be presented to a healthcare practitioner who has made an outstanding contribution within the scope of the theme.
The main theme of the Congress, “Health for All in an Unequal World: Obligations of Global Bioethics,” is of critical relevance in the present global context. The public-health crisis due to Ebola, and later Zika, that emerged and prevailed longer than was expected, along with many other ethics challenges, have foregrounded global inequities and the plight of inadequately developed and organised national health systems of the affected countries.
Despite several gains in health research, discoveries, and healthcare, the global community has not been able to achieve equitable healthcare systems. Instead, the increasing domination of the for-profit private medical industrial complex (transnational pharma, equipment, insurance, and other health corporations), unequal political and economic relations between nations, and growing conflicts have only increased inequities within and across all nations.
Inequity in access to healthcare is much more pronounced in countries like India. In such scenarios, the contributions of individual healthcare providers, through their practice and innovations, towards addressing this inequity are of immense significance to the communities they serve. Against this backdrop, what would it mean for a healthcare provider to be a deserving candidate for the IJME Ethics Award for this debut year?
Healthcare providers serving in either urban or rural areas and in private or public healthcare systems could be considered if they: (a) serve the marginal and vulnerable communities [“marginal” is conceived in a broader sense, for example, an underserved population or communities stigmatised due to their professions, health conditions, sexual orientations, age, gender, and other socioeconomic variables]; (b) have adopted innovative approaches to reaching out to those in need or taking services to their doorstep; (c) practice rational prescription practices and strive to ensure community access to medicines; (d) refrain from participating in “cut” practices; (e ) strive to make generic medicine practice a norm; (f) have been whistleblowers; (g) help promote a culture of ethical clinical care in their peer community; and/or (h) help empower the communities the they serve. These are only some of the aspects of healthcare service provision that merit acknowledgement and encouragement from the larger peer community.
Eligibility criteria
In order to be eligible for a nomination, the following criteria must be met:
Award prize
The healthcare practitioner selected for the bioethics award will receive the following:
Application and selection process
Selection of the award winner from the received applications will be done by a national selection committee of three eminent persons appointed and assisted by the secretarial staff of the FMES/IJME. The process for applications is as follows:
The decision of the selection committee will be final and binding on the FMES/IJME for conferral of the award.
Selection committee
The selection committee will have three members, who may each have different a different background: (a) clinical practice expert; (b) public health practice/activism expert; and (c) non-medical person or person active in a civil-society organisation for bioethics, healthcare rights, and patient and consumer interests. (At least one if not two of them will be women.)
The selection work will be non-remunerative, but the committee members will be provided with compensation for travel and accommodation and granted free registration for participation in the NBC/WCB, including preconference workshops/symposia.
Important dates
Conflicts of interest
The following persons, or persons associated with* them, are prohibited from making nominations and/or interacting with the selection committee in the selection process:
The members of the selection committee are disallowed from nominating themselves or persons associated with them for the award.
*Association includes family ties, close personal friendship, shared departmental/institutional affiliation, and collaborative work in the past five years
Rules and regulations
If applicants are unclear as to the rules or any element of the Awards, or experience difficulties of any kind, they can address their questions, problems, or queries to Richa Sharma, Awards Secretariat Coordinator, at [email protected].
Please click on the following link, download the form, fill it up and send it to [email protected].