Category: Letters
‘Evidence-biased therapy’
Regarding our article, and Meenal Mamdani's critique of it, our article ought to have been titled 'Evidence-biased therapy' just to drive home the simple fact that modern medicine with all its diagnostic/therapeutic wizardry, treats, according to its knowledge of cancer, merely some evidence and ...
Uninformed consent, but ethical anyway?
Did Prakash give his informed consent for his kidney to be removed and transplanted into his brother?
Advertisement approved by the IMA?

This is to bring to your attention an advertisement on the back page of the June, 1998 issue of the Journal of Occupational and Industrial Medicine, for the soap Lifebuoy Plus. The ad carries the claim that it has been approved by the Indian Medical Association.

Anecdotes do not make for evidence
The article by Ashok Vaidya 'Ethics in the Clinical Practice of Integral Medicine' gives two case studies where in one case the patient, a young girl with hypothyroidism, was harmed by going to an ayurvedic doctor and in the other case the patient, a young man with viral hepatitis, was helped by ...
Doctors and human rights: many issues
Your editorial on the medical profession and human rights took a narrow view of the question of medical ethics. It tended to stress instances in which a doctor has abutted or been a party to human rights violations. It missed certain other ethical issues which deserve mention.
Doctors and sexual assault
After seeing your story 'Sexual Assault: the role of the examining doctor', I have a suggestion to make. Would it be possible for your journal to also examine the issue of doctors who sexually violate their patients during physical examinations?
Fighting medical negligence
I am writing this for the information of those who plan to file or who have just filed medical negligence cases. You have a chance of winning if there is direct evidence in your favour: if a forceps was left inside the operated patient, the wrong part removed, the wrong blood group given, and so ...
Ethics, human rights and polio eradication
From the time that India became signatory to the 1988 World Health Assembly resolution to commit the World Health Organization and all member nations to eradicate poliomyelitis worldwide by the year 2000, our efforts under the Universal Immunisation Program (UIP) have improved. This is evident fr...
The ICMR’s ethical guidelines: no debate?
On September 24, I attended a public debate on a draft consultative document entitled 'Ethical Guidelines on Biomedical Research Involving Human Subjects.' produced by an ICMR-sponsored committee under the chairmanship of Justice MN Venkatachalaiah of the National Human Rights Commission.
Medical education and medical ethics
In school, ethics was taught as part of Moral Science. I then believed that ethics was a way of living, a matter of right and wrong, where everything was black and white.
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