Journal of the Forum for Medical Ethics Society Since 1993

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Current Issue
Vol VII No. 1
Jan - Mar 2010


Recent Issues



Ragging : human rights abuse tolerated by the authorities
Sanjay A Pai, Prabha S. Chandra

Indian Journal of Medical Ethics Vol VI No. 2 April-June 2009

   
EDITORIALS  
Ragging: human rights abuse tolerated by the authorities Sanjay A Pai, Prabha S Chandra
Ethics in ethics committees: time to share experiences, discuss challenges and do a better job Amar Jesani
Bombing medical facilities: a violation of international humanitarian law Neha Madhiwalla, Nobhojit Roy
   
ARTICLES  
Ethics in the practice of clinical psychology Rathna Isaac
Ethical issues in treating pregnant women with severe mental illness Geetha Desai, Prabha S Chandra
Profile and role of the members of ethics committees in hospitals and research organisations in Pune, India Radhika Brahme, Sanjay Mehendale
A new approach for teaching nursing ethics in Iran Alireza Nikbakht Nasrabadi, Soodabeh Joolaee, Zohre Parsa-Yekta, Nasser Bahrani, Fatemeh Noghani, Vasso Vydelingum
   
COMMENTS  
Migrants and medical refugees: a short report Anurag Bhargava
Teaching ethics in an unethical setting: " doing nothing " is neither good nor right Subrata Chattopadhyay
Evolution - research - training from practice to law and ethics Luc Picard
Ayurveda for comprehensive healthcare Sanjeev Rastogi
Selection criteria in the NICU: who should get effective critical care? Zulfiker Ali
Pictorial warnings on tobacco products: how delayed and diluted in India? Thejus T, Jayakrishan T
   
SELECTED SUMMARY  
Beyond the age of consent: clinical research in the neurologically or cognitively impaired Roop Gursahani
   
BOOK REVIEW  
Conflicts of interest Sandhya Srinivasan
Algorithms, intuition, evidence and the zebra Sanjay A Pai
   
FILM REVIEW  
Where do you draw the line? Aarthi Chandrasekhar
   
   
   
CORRECTION:  
FROM THE PRESS  
FROM OTHER JOURNALS  
CORRESPONDENCE  
FINANCIAL REPORT 2007-2008

Can a bully become a good doctor? 

The death of Aman Kachru from a severe beating by his seniors in medical college has brought “ragging” back into the public eye. An editorial notes that students who participate in this institutionalised bullying cannot become good doctors. Authorities must recognise “ragging” for what it is-a violation of human rights.

Thirty years after the ICMR’s guidelines on ethics committees, and despite the exponential increase in clinical trials in India, we know nothing about the functioning of ECs across the country. An editorial launches a column on the ethics of ethics committees, arguing that EC members have an ethical duty to discuss the challenges they face. This issue also carries the findings of a survey of EC members of 12 Pune-based research organisations.

The recent attacks on medical facilities in Palestine and Sri Lanka are violations of the Geneva Convention. An editorial in this issue discusses the ethical basis for providing protection to hospitals.

The treatment of mental illness that occurs during pregnancy can pose special concerns. Clinicians present some of the ethical challenges faced by the treating team at a perinatal psychiatric clinic in Bangalore. Another paper highlights the need for a code of ethical conduct for clinical psychologists-a mechanism that holds practising individuals accountable for their behaviour.

A commentary on teaching ethics in unethical institutional settings argues that “doing nothing” goes directly against the principles of “doing good” and “avoiding harm”. Practitioners of medicine have a moral obligation to protect, uphold and nurture the cause of ethics-in theory and in practice.

Access is the single most important ethical issue in healthcare. A doctor practising in a rural area describes the circumstances of the 720 million people in India who struggle to get the treatment that is their right.


 



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