Indian Health Care Sector

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Amber G.
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xpost:
From Hilary Clinton's remarks on US-India Higher Education Cooperation:
And there are so many wonderful stories. I’m sure many of you could tell your own, but I want to end with this one because it really hits close to home in an area that I care deeply about.

A few years ago, a small group of American and Indian classmates at Stanford University decided to work together to build a better baby incubator. Four hundred and fifty premature and low-weight babies die every hour, and traditional baby incubators can cost as much as $20,000. So the students developed the Embrace baby warmer, a portable incubator for use in poor and rural areas that doesn’t require electricity and only costs around $100.

After graduating from Stanford, this Indian and American team moved to Bangalore to continue working on their idea and launched their project. And it’s now in use in hospitals in India and saving babies’ lives. Their goal is to save 100,000 babies by 2013.
Link: http://www.state.gov/secretary/rm/2011/10/175368.htm
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TB Cases Decline Worldwide for the First Time
the first time, the number of people infected with tuberculosis (TB) each year is declining, according to Mario Raviglione, MD, director of the World Health Organization (WHO)'s Stop TB program.

In a numbers-heavy talk, Dr. Raviglione highlighted a mix of positive and sobering news from the report. Among achievements, he noted that:

The number of people who were infected with TB decreased to 8.8 million in 2010, after peaking at 9 million in 2005.
In 2010, TB deaths declined to the lowest level in a decade, to 1.4 million deaths, after reaching 1.8 million deaths in 2003.
The TB death rate dropped 40% between 1990 and 2010.
All regions except Africa are on track to achieve a 50% decline in mortality by 2015.
In 2009, 87% of patients treated were cured, bringing the total successfully treated to 46 million cured and 7 million lives saved under WHO guidelines since 1995. "It's a major achievement," he said.
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Robotic Liver Surgery in India
In good news for liver donors, robotic surgery, which makes the procedure safer and minimises discomfort, is now available in India. The liver transplant team at Medanta Liver Institute conducted India's first and the world's third robotic liver donor surgery three weeks ago.
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India has seen longest polio-free period this year
Even though India is yet to be declared polio-free nation by the World Health Organisation, the year 2011 has something to cheer about for the country in polio eradication drive.

The longest polio-free period India has ever had was achieved this year due to sustained immunisation focus across the country, according to a World Health Organisation Surveillance Officer.

While there were 33 polio cases in India in the year 2010, there was only one polio case this year so far.

“India had only one case this year till now. That single polio case was reported in Howrah (West Bengal) in the last week of January 2011. After that, there is not a single case of polio in India and in fact this was the longest polio-free period the country has ever had,” Santhosh Rajagopal, WHO Surveillance Officer, told The Hindu here {Madurai} on Sunday.

The fact that India had no polio case in the last 220 days was a matter to be happy but a lot more had to be done to “complete the job” of eradication by sustained campaign against polio.

The last polio case reported in Tamil Nadu was seven years ago.
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Polio vaccine absolutely safe, do not believe rumours
Talking to The Hindu here {Madurai} on Sunday, K. Vanaja, Joint Director (Immunisation), said the multiple strategies include special focus on migrant workers coming to the State from other parts of country and involving village health nurses for immunisation activity.

“We are making sure there is no import of polio case through migrant workers. Districts where there is large migrant population such as Chennai, Kancheepuram and Coimbatore are kept under strict surveillance. Besides, the routine polio immunisation too has been strengthened,” she said.

She said the State Health Department has now roped in Village Health Nurses for the polio immunisation activity in order to make sure that every child is getting the vaccine.

Referring to the rumours spread in the State about children dying after the polio drops were given to them a few years ago, the Joint Director said parents should not believe false information spread about vaccine safety.
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India versus TB
Although the number of new TB cases worldwide remains a matter of concern – the figure stood at nearly 9 million in 2010 – the incidence rate has been falling since 2002, according to a recent report of the World Health Organisation. Estimates of the year-wise number of deaths reveal a declining trend. Against this background, India presents a dismal picture. Last year, the case detection rate — the first and the most vital parameter — was only 59 per cent of all cases (both smear positive and smear negative). China, on the other hand, has made tremendous progress in this area — the case detection rate increased from 33 per cent in 2000 to 74 per cent in 2006 to 87 per cent in 2010. Prevalence was halved between 1990 and 2010 and the annual rate of decline, which was 2.2 per cent between 1990 and 2000, rose to 4.7 per cent in the next decade. The mortality rate was slashed by almost 80 per cent, and the incidence rate fell by 3.4 per cent, over the past 20 years.

The key factor behind China's success is the mandatory web-based TB reporting system that has been in operation since 2005. This covers virtually every health facility in the country. In addition, all TB deaths are required to be registered in all the 31 provinces. These hard-nosed initiatives have enabled the country to measure the prevalence of even multi-drug resistant TB (MDR-TB). In stark contrast, underreporting of TB incidence for 2010 in India was as high as 41 per cent, in WHO's reckoning. The reasons for this are not difficult to find. Data are collected only from the government-run institutions and there is no mandatory system for private practitioners to report every confirmed TB case. With many patients seeking treatment from non-government doctors, India's contribution to the world's notified cases in 2010 was surely much higher than WHO's estimate of 24 per cent. It is well established that a flawed reporting system and an inaccurate data base undermine the formulation of effective policies. Many private medical practitioners fail to diagnose the disease; and even when they do that, they tend to follow a regimen that is not standard, thereby contributing to the emergence of more MDR-TB cases. Two people die very three minutes in laid-back India from this infectious disease. The government must give the highest priority to the battle against TB, emulating countries that have done dramatically better on this front.
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India needs 600 medical colleges and 1500 nursing schools
Healthcare issues such as telemedicine, electronic health records, role of IT in patient safety and emerging trends in single speciality hospitals, were discussed at an invited colloquium on “Transforming Healthcare” organised by the Administrative Staff College of India (ASCI) on Sunday.

Setting the tone for the discussions, Dr Kakarla Subba rao, former director of Nizam's Institute of Medical Sciences, said healthcare and medicare were “two sides of the same coin.” This understanding is however lacking in Government and other healthcare providers, he pointed out.

He said India needs 600 medical colleges and 1,500 nursing colleges. “With 70 per cent of doctors presently practising in cities, hardly three to four per cent were working in rural areas,” he lamented.
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India leads in rotavirus deaths: Lancet
Close to one lakh children below the age of five years died of diarrhoea attributable to rotavirus infection in 2008, accounting for 22 per cent of the total deaths reported globally, reports the latest edition of the Lancet Infection Diseases magazine.

Meanwhile, Save the Children, a non-government organization working for children, said efficacy trials were still on in India on the rotaviral vaccines and till these trials are over there is little data to prove the efficacy or otherwise of these new vaccines. Secondly and critically, these patented vaccines are so far being produced by a handful of private pharmaceutical companies and are hugely expensive. Introducing these vaccines in the public health system will involve huge resources. When the government is unable to raise the resources for critical primary health care, including routine immunization, it would appear inappropriate if the government were to invest additional resources on newer vaccines.
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shyam
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Bhopal Disaster victims: Lab rats for Big Pharma

Aditya_V
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SSridhar wrote:India leads in rotavirus deaths: Lancet
Close to one lakh children below the age of five years died of diarrhoea attributable to rotavirus infection in 2008, accounting for 22 per cent of the total deaths reported globally, reports the latest edition of the Lancet Infection Diseases magazine.

Meanwhile, Save the Children, a non-government organization working for children, said efficacy trials were still on in India on the rotaviral vaccines and till these trials are over there is little data to prove the efficacy or otherwise of these new vaccines. Secondly and critically, these patented vaccines are so far being produced by a handful of private pharmaceutical companies and are hugely expensive. Introducing these vaccines in the public health system will involve huge resources. When the government is unable to raise the resources for critical primary health care, including routine immunization, it would appear inappropriate if the government were to invest additional resources on newer vaccines.
Anther reason why some son is getting the Oral Rotavirus vaccine.
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Re: Indian Health Care Sector

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Another reason is the Rotavirus vaccine industry. Showing inflated numbers is very profitable for their business. Even if this virus kills only a small number of the newborn children, 100% of the kids will get vaccinated. There is money when enough fear is generated.

we already have a few vaccines available from MNC companies currently and this is an optional vaccine. Bharat Biotech is working on an indigenous strain based vaccine. I do not know when it will hit the market but should bring the current high prices down, like we saw with the Hepatitis B vaccine when it was indigenised by Shanta biotech (now Sanofi).
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Varoon Shekhar
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Doesn't the horrible tragedy of AMRI in Kolkata show at least some of the pitfalls of private sector medical care? This was an exclusive super speciality deluxe( blah blah) facility, and look what took place. There's an associate issue of fleecing of some patients by these organisations. One can't say 'private sector' by itself is the answer to health care woes in India. Which of course doesn't mean endorsing public sector facilities fully, either.
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Post by Uttam »

Varoon Shekhar wrote:Doesn't the horrible tragedy of AMRI in Kolkata show at least some of the pitfalls of private sector medical care? This was an exclusive super speciality deluxe( blah blah) facility, and look what took place. There's an associate issue of fleecing of some patients by these organisations. One can't say 'private sector' by itself is the answer to health care woes in India. Which of course doesn't mean endorsing public sector facilities fully, either.
What makes you think the "government" hospitals are any different? Patients pay fee in the private clinics and bribe in the government hospitals. They at least get treated with respect in the private hospitals. This tragedy is not the case of government v. private hospitals. This is about non-implementation of fire code which is a problem both everywhere.
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Randomized Trial of Yoga in Metastatic Breast Cancer
The practice of yoga might reduce psychological distress and modulate abnormal cortisol levels and immune responses in patients with metastatic breast cancer, according to a study presented here at the 34th Annual San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium.

This suggestion comes from a small randomized trial conducted collaboratively by yogis and medical doctors, including S.K. Gopinath, MD, from the Department of Surgical, Medical and Radiation Oncology at the HCG-BIO Super Specialty Center in Bangalore, Karnataka, India.

In a 3-month study, 45 patients were randomized to a daily yoga intervention and 46 to standard supportive counseling. The subjects, with an average age of 50.5 years, were assessed at baseline and after the intervention.

The yoga intervention was resoundingly effective in improving psychosocial states.

After the intervention, there was a statistically significant decrease in anxiety (P <.001), depression (P < .001), perceived stress (P = .01), fatigue severity (P < .001), and fatigue interference (P < .001) in the yoga group, compared with the control group. There was also a significant improvement in emotional function (P < .001), role function (P = .03), cognitive function (P < .001), and global quality of life (P < .001) in yoga group.

The researchers also evaluated biologic measures. At the beginning and the end of the intervention, daily saliva samples were collected at 9:00 am and 10:00 pm, and enzyme immune assay kits (Salimetrics) were used to evaluate cortisol levels. In addition, blood samples were collected for 3 consecutive days between 8:00 am and 10:00 am so that natural killer cells could be enumerated with flow cytometry.

Again, yoga was uniformly effective. There was a significant decrease in the yoga group in early morning (6:00 am) cortisol levels (P = .03).

This finding means that cortisol, which is a measure of stress and naturally decreases when the body is at rest, was successfully modulated in the yoga group. Research has shown that patients with metastatic breast cancer whose diurnal cortisol rhythms were flattened or abnormal have earlier mortality (J Natl Cancer Inst. 2000;92:994-1000).

After the intervention, there was also a significant increase in the percentage of natural killer cells in the yoga group (P = .03), compared with the control group. Previous research has demonstrated that natural killer cells, which are naturally occurring cytotoxins, play a therapeutic role in the treatment of human cancers (Cancer. 1996;77:1226-1243).
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First case of single-lung transplant in the country
Chennai: A young Iraqi patient who received a single lung transplant in the city has become part of medical history in India.

Specialists who treated the patient claim this is the first case of single lung transplant in the country. He was operated on Friday, and is now off the ventilator, with doctors monitoring his progress.

The recipient had interstitial lung disease, a condition that causes small balloons to form in the lungs, causes difficulty in breathing and thereby resulting in his dependence on oxygen cylinders.

N. Madhu Shankar, cardiothoracic surgeon at Global Hospitals, who performed the surgery, says, “It is an unimaginable situation to live with as these patients struggle for each breath of their life. They have a limited life expectancy of around two years and single lung transplantation is an accepted modality of treatment for these patients.”

The patient was referred from his home country, and was independently evaluated at Global Hospital by pulmonologists Vijil Ragulan and Srinivas, who concluded that the single transplant was the solution for him.

It is now believed that a single lung transplant is sufficient, just like a single kidney or cornea. This way you can use the other organ on another person,” Dr. Madhu Shankar explains. Also, it reduces the risk of death, he adds.

The first time the patient landed in India, no matching donor could be found for him, and so he left.

This time, he was lucky in that two days after his arrival, a healthy, non-smoker's young lung became available.

According to hospital authorities, the donor was an 18-year-old male, an air-conditioner mechanic from Nellore, who had been declared brain-dead after a fall.

While usually, compromised lungs also cause the heart to fail, in this instance, the Iraqi patient's heart was healthy and a single lung transplant would suffice, specialists decided.
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Chennai doctor's bring back Congo kid's eyesight
It’s been two years since 8-year-old Mupenzi Assumani Ephrem properly saw what Christmas looked like at home. Now, after two near-emergency brain surgeries at Fortis Malar Hospital, the boy who had been rendered blind is excited at flying home to Congo to be with his family for Christmas. He nods his head, when asked if he wanted to go home for the holidays.

The normally bright, stocky boy had lost sight in his right eye and had almost lost vision in his left eye too, before doctors found what was wrong. “He was diagnosed with a pituitary macro adenoma, after visiting hospitals in the UK and France,” said Dr Venkateswara Prasanna, Consultant-Neuro Surgeon at the hospital.

The boy who had complained of a continuous headache for two years, had a ‘cricket-ball sized’ tumour in his skull, that had damaged his optic nerves, thanks to its weight. “European doctors had given up on him and chose not to do the expensive surgery,” he added.

The first surgery was done endoscopically through his nose, where the size of the tumour was reduced and the part accessible was removed. Ten days later, the surgery began, “We cut into his skull and managed to extract the rest of the tumour,” said the doctor. The results were instant, “I could see,” said the boy with a smile, when asked how he was feeling. The possibility of his regaining vision in the right eye remain moot, “but not impossible”. Even the problem of hormone imbalance, was corrected.
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Pandyan, in some cases, like Maldives for example, there is a government-to-hospital kind of association. In some other cases, NGOs in African countries or even Iraq, for that matter, advise patients where to go in India. In this case of the Congo kid, I do not know prescisely how he landed here. But, there has been a long-standing Indian presence in that country, as part of UN Peacekeeping Forces.

ISRO does provide the mechanism which groups like Apollo have utilized in Africa.
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Complicated surgery keeps hops of an expectant mother alive
Chennai: Sometimes the convoluted route of touching your nose, taking your arm around your head, pays. In this instance, it was the only way to touch the nose.

A 28-year-old pregnant woman from Nagercoil began complaining of chest pain and breathlessness during the sixth month of her pregnancy. Initially they thought it was a weak heart and lungs, but an MRI scan revealed otherwise. It showed an elevation of the diaphragm (the muscular sheet that lies between the chest and the abdomen). The liver had pushed it up into the chest area, compressing the lungs, and shifting the heart.

The condition is called Diaphragmatic Eventration, and can be present at birth, or can be acquired later in life.

“The combination of Diaphragmatic Eventration and pregnancy is very dangerous. Current medical literature allows for a 60-85 per cent chance of the mother or child dying,” explains J.S.Rajkumar, chairman, LifeLine Hospitals, where the patient was subsequently referred to. Clearly, she needed a multidisciplinary approach, and so key departments of the hospital pitched in.

The surgery, performed on December 21, had to go through the roundabout route.

The usual abdominal approach to correct this condition had to be forsaken, as it carried a high risk of losing the baby.

The surgical team, headed by Dr. Rajkumar, and Neha, decided to go through the chest without a large incision. “We decided to put in multiple holes in place of the incision and therefore, no blood loss and the patient was mobile in less than 24 hours,” Dr. Rajkumar explained.

In a first-in-the-world successful attempt, the team managed to pleat the diaphragm in five rows, in order to give it sufficient strength to withstand the pressure from abdominal organs in future he added.

Throughout the course of the operation, gynaecologists Padma Priya and Swathi monitored the baby's heartbeat.

This continued for 24 hours following the surgery as well.

The other members of the multi-disciplinary team that assisted in the procedure included thoracic physician Radhakrishnan, two intensivists and anaesthetists Sathya Kumar and Sambandam, thoracic surgeon Rajeev Santhosham, and neonatologist Ravi.

Dr. Padma Priya said the patient must now undergo delivery through the Caesarean section as the increased abdominal pressure may compromise the repair of the diaphragm.

She was otherwise confident about the health of the mother and baby for the rest of the pregnancy.
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Infant Mortality Rate on the decline
The infant mortality rate (IMR) has shown a 3 point decline, dropping from 50 deaths per 1,000 live births to 47 and moving a step closer to achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) target of 30. However, IMR increased by one point in Kerala, Mizoram and Dadra and Nagar Haveli.

According to the latest Sample Registration System (SRS), conducted by the Registrar-General of India, the two worst performing States — Madhya Pradesh and Himachal Pradesh — have shown an impressive 5 point decline. In the former, the figure dropped from 67 in 2009 to 62 in 2010 and in the latter, it was from 45 to 40 .

While the IMR national average is 47, it stands at 51 in the rural areas and 31 in the urban regions. However, neo-natal deaths continue to be a challenge where 34 babies are still dying for every 1,000 born.

Talking to reporters here on Wednesday, Union Health and Family Welfare Secretary P. K. Pradhan said Bihar, Gujarat, Odisha, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Meghalaya, Sikkim and Tripura had shown a four-point decline in the IMR. Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Chhattisgarh, Haryana, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Delhi, Nagaland, Uttarakhand and Chandigarh have shown a three-point decline.

Similarly, in Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Jammu and Kashmir, Manipur and Andaman and Nicobar Islands, the IMR came down by two points while it remained static in Lakshdweep and Puducherry. A one point decline was reported from Arunachal Pradesh, Goa and Daman and Diu.

Newborn-care

Mr. Pradhan said efforts would now be focussed on home-based newborn-care as 52 per cent of child deaths took place in the first 28 days of birth. “Home-based newborn-care through Accredited Social Health Activists (ASHAs) has been initiated by providing an incentive of Rs. 250.

The purpose of home-based newborn-care is to improve newborn practices at the community level and early detection and referral of sick newborns.

Mr. Pradhan said the Janani Shishu Suraksha Karyakram, providing for free transport, food and drugs and diagnostics to all pregnant women and sick newborns, would further promote institutional delivery and eliminate out-of-pocket expenses, which act as a barrier to seeking institutional care.

Importantly, the government intended to set up facilities such as Special New Born Care Units, New Born Stabilisation Units and New Born Baby Corners at different levels with at least one at the district level.

The mother and child tracking system had evoked a huge response, with 1.32 crore women and 82.6 lakh children already registered.
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NRI doctors homebound
A prominent gastroenterologist of Indian origin in the US has decided to return to India set up a 600-bed hospital in India, leaving behind a lucrative practice. He is quite upset about increasing regulation in the US that he believes is stifling professional satisfaction. Apart from regulation, global recession too is proving to be a major reason for such doctors to look at India.

Several thousand Indian doctors in the United Kingdom, both in service and Indian children who completed their medical education, too are seriously planning to look for jobs in India.

Dr Ramesh Mehta, Secretary-General of GAPIO (Global Association of Physicians of Indian Origin), sees clear signs of reverse brain drain as one-fourth of 40,000 doctors of Indian origin in the UK’s National Health Services were going to retire soon.

Recently, Kelly Services, which tracks human resources movement trends across the globe, estimated that about three lakh Indian professionals (cutting across different streams) are likely to come back in the next five years.

“New generation doctors are not finding jobs because of recession. They are looking at India jobs. New colleges and institutes are coming up here and they might need experienced people. Those who aspire for the best positions and not getting them too are trying to come back,” Dr Mehta said.

On the other hand, India desperately needs doctors. “It is short of six lakh doctors and 10,000 nurses,” he said, pointing out that any reverse drain of doctors would quite be handy for India.

Numbers

Indian doctors abroad are not in small in numbers. As many as five lakh doctors have made foreign countries abroad their home. Dominated by the US with over one lakh in the US, geographies where Indian doctors have settled in significant numbers include the UK, Australia and New Zealand, said Dr Prathap C. Reddy, Chairman of Apollo group of hospitals.

It, however, is not that easy for them to come back and join hospitals and colleges directly when they returned. They would have to tackle the issues of acceptability of their degrees.

GAPIO is an umbrella body of associations of Indian origin doctors in several countries. Dr Reddy and Dr Mehta were listing out initiatives that GAPIO and its constituents might start to better medical education and healthcare services India.

They were here to take part in the second edition of GAPIO conference here on Wednesday.

Sustained growth

Commenting on this trend, Mr Kamal Karanth, Managing Director of Kelly Services India, said that talent migration has ceased to be just a phenomenon relevant to movement from emerging economies to developed economies. “The sustained growth of India and the resilience India showed during the slow down also has added dynamic transition and movement back to India,” he said.
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Re: Indian Health Care Sector

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Uplifting news about the return of some doctors.

Does that figure of 600,000 (6 lakh) physicians in India only include practitioners of modern medicine? It's a small number for a huge country of 1.2 billion. Isn't it likely that a large number of people use Ayurvedic, Siddha et al medicine and doctors, instead of the modern kind? So the situation, though not good, may not be so poor, since millions at least obtain some health care( of whatever quality and success) from the 'traditional' sources.

Regardless, 600,000 is still inadequate, and you wonder how many people choose medicine as a career in modern India. Are the numbers growing, stable or declining?
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Health, a key pillar of Indo-US collaboration
Chennai: Health is a key pillar of the Indo-US government-to-government collaborations, UN Consul General Jennifer McIntyre, said on Saturday.

Speaking at the Indo-US International symposium on Pancreas, organised by the Madras Diabetes Research Foundation (MDRF) and Medindia Hospitals, Ms. McIntyre said there were several bilateral agreements in the area of health and science all over the country. Also, the pancreas was one organ that was a key area of collaboration between the two nations – the project underway to develop an artificial Pancreas at the Mayo Clinic, US, was being headed by two Indians, she added.

Speaking on the occasion, V. Mohan, Chairman, Dr. Mohan's Diabetes Specialities Centre (DMDSC) said, the aim was to bring together doctors and scientists working in different fields related to the endocrine and exocrine functions of the pancreas on a common scientific platform, so as to enhance their understanding of the organ. Several new aspects of pancreatic diseases would be discussed over the two day seminar, he added.

T.S.Chandrasekar, chairman, MedIndia Hospitals, said the collaboration between diabetologists who deal with the endocrine functions and the gastroenterologists who deal with the exocrine aspects of the pancreas would enable doctors to tackle the pancreas on the whole. The common garden variety of diabetes (indicative of a malfunction of the endocrine function) does not necessarily predispose one to malfunction of the exocrine function as well, however the reverse condition must be watched carefully, as exocrine problems may also involve endocrine aspects, he added.

C.S. Pitchumoni, chief of Gastroenterology, hepatology and clinical nutrition, Saint Peter's University Hospital, New Jersey, US, was honoured on the occasion on the completion of 50 years of writing the first paper on tropical chronic pancreatitis in 1962, and conferred the MDRF Lifetime Contribution Award, and the MedIndia Oration Award from MedIndia Hospitals. Dr. Pitchumoni has been well recognised in the field of Pancreatology in India and abroad. He is the founding member of the International college of Pancreatology and is on the editorial board of the Journal of Pancreatology.
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Varoon Shekhar wrote:Uplifting news about the return of some doctors.

Does that figure of 600,000 (6 lakh) physicians in India only include practitioners of modern medicine? It's a small number for a huge country of 1.2 billion. Isn't it likely that a large number of people use Ayurvedic, Siddha et al medicine and doctors, instead of the modern kind? So the situation, though not good, may not be so poor, since millions at least obtain some health care( of whatever quality and success) from the 'traditional' sources.

Regardless, 600,000 is still inadequate, and you wonder how many people choose medicine as a career in modern India. Are the numbers growing, stable or declining?
According to Indian Medical Council (IMC) statistics of c. 2006, the number of allopathic (modern medicine) practitioners in India was 662,646. It didn't include siddha, unani, ayurveda, homeopathic doctors. The number of qualified dentists was 72496. I expect not less than 25000 doctors with graduate qualifications to pass out every year. A state like Tamilnadu has ~ 2000 medical seats every year. This year, every seat was contested by 12 applicants. At least in TN, medicine as an attractive profession remains.

Some top states in terms of healthcare givers (c. 2006)

Code: Select all

    State                   Allopathic           Dentists
                              Doctors

Andhra Pradesh                 48649               3726
Bihar                          35976               2396
Delhi                          28525               3848
Gujarat                        40230               2558             
Karnataka                      71909               19757
Kerala                         34577               5735
Maharashtra                   100428               6857
Punjab                         36100               3953
Tamilnadu                      75415               9876
UP                             49527               4637
West Bengal                    54513               1957

Varoon Shekhar
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Re: Indian Health Care Sector

Post by Varoon Shekhar »

SSridhar writes: ...Way to go, TN!

But one still gets the impression that medicine as a career is not all that popular in India. Looking at my extended family, to take one example, I can't think of any young person who is going into medicine. It's IT, Engineering, Law,B.Com, Graphic arts etc. Wonderful, of course, but curious that not one has gone into medicine. The situation is quite different among my relatives in the US and Canada, where many have chosen medicine, if they are not official physicians already!
SSridhar
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5-day old undergoes 5-hour neuro surgery
Salem: A 5-day old male baby born with a large swelling in the lumbo sacral region (lower back) underwent a complex 5-hour neuro surgical operation involving the brain and spinal cord in lower spine successfully at Neuro Foundation, here, recently.

The swelling was not detected in the Ultra Sound Scan during pregnancy.

Dr. Natarajan, assisted by anesthesiologist G. Sekar and paediatrician K. Periyasamy, performed the complicated surgery on the child weighing 2.5 kilogram, under GA which lasted for 5 hours.

Elaborating on the procedure, Dr. Natarajan told the media that the child had the complex malformation development in brain and spinal cord which resulted in the cerebellum herniating from the skull into the spine causing compression of the upper spinal cord and gross fluid accumulation and swelling of the spinal cord.

It also had difficulty in breathing at the time of admission because of the major swelling in the low back region with the terminal portions of the spinal cord present under the skin. It was critical because of the fluid leaking through the swelling in the lower back and had respiratory difficulty.

“The blood loss is kept to the minimum and anaesthesia had to be given carefully by sophisticated advanced anaesthesia machine with advance monitoring system.

Also the pre-operative and post-operative fluid balances and other organ system were maintained so that the child recovered fast,” Dr. Natarajan pointed out.

Though it was a common problem, diagnosing it on a 5-day-old was a rarity. “The only way to save the child is surgery at the earliest,” he said.

The child had recovered immediately and was fed on breast milk 4 hours after the surgical procedure.
Austin
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Re: Indian Health Care Sector

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Malnutrition a matter of national shame: PM
Highlighting that 42 per cent children were underweight in a country witnessing high growth, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today described it as a national shame and said the government could not rely solely on ICDS, a programme for early childhood development, to address it.

"...the problem of malnutrition is a matter of national shame. Despite impressive growth in our GDP, the level of under-nutrition in the country is unacceptably high," he said releasing a report on Hunger and Malnutrition (HUNGaMA) here.
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Re: Indian Health Care Sector

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SSridhar
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How India went from 741 polio cases to zero in just two years
The last case of wild polio virus reported in India was exactly one year ago, on January 13, when stool samples showed that 18-month-old Rukhsar Khatoon in West Bengal had polio. She has since recovered, but it is the progress of whittling down from the largest number of cases in the world to zero that is fascinating to public health experts globally.

Clearly, the nation had to overcome tremendous challenges to get here – not least of them, a huge population, the logistics of covering a vast geographical area, poor sanitation and infrastructure, resistance among some groups of people to taking the vaccine, and children of migrant communities who were difficult to cover.

It was with the Expanded Immunisation Programme in the late 1970s that India started its battle against polio. In 1985, it became a part of the Universal Immunisation Programme launched throughout the country. A significant milestone in the journey was the launch of the National Pulse Polio Initiative (PPI) in 1995-96, targeting coverage of every child under five in the country with the Oral Polio Vaccine (OPV) to be given on two National Immunisation Days, one each in December and January, followed by more focused state-level immunisation campaigns throughout the year. The PPI set for the nation a new target — eradication of polio by 2005.

This involved better social mobilisation through involvement of millions of frontline workers from the private health sector, members of Rotary International, volunteers, anganwadi workers, besides the massive public health workforce. In addition, the PPI created systems – cold chains for storage and transportation of the vaccines, ensuring vaccine vial monitors on each vial, follow up and mop up campaigns to track children left out during immunisation days.

India has spent more than Rs. 12,000 crore on PPI, a Union Ministry of Health release said. One of its major partners, Rotary International says it has spent over $149 million in India over the years, as part of its contributions. In each PPI, 24 lakh vaccinators visit over 20 crore households to ensure that nearly 17.2 crore children, less than five years, are immunised with the OPV. Mobile and transit vaccination teams immunise children at railway stations, bus stands, market areas, and construction sites. Special rounds were held to give the OPV to children of migrants and refugees.

And yet, concerns remained. Pockets of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar were still endemic, responsible for the cases being reported in the country, directly, and through migration. In recent years, the government targeted 107 ‘high risk' blocks in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar, and identified the challenges, which included remote locations, refusal of vaccine in some areas, and migrating populations. ‘Influencers', including religious leaders, were enlisted and tracked for each high risk area, and this helped polio teams reach more families. Positive results were seen as a consequence: UP and Bihar have not reported any case of polio since April 2010, and September 2010, respectively.

While India has clearly stepped into the endgame stage, it is by no means closure, public health specialists warn. Mr. Azad tempered his joy over the achievement with concerns about the future. “We are excited and hopeful, and at the same time, vigilant and alert”. He cautioned that there was no room for complacency, with the nation having to maintain its zero-cases record for the next three years to be able to totally ‘eradicate' poliomyelitis. “It is a great stride forward,” Deepak Kapur, Rotary International's India Polio chair, said. “However, it is just one stride ahead. Only one third of the journey has been completed, we need three clean years for the certification.”

The greatest concern is the possibility of infections carried across borders by migrating populations. GPEI points out that in 2011, Pakistan and Afghanistan both saw alarming increases in polio cases, and poliovirus from Pakistan re-infected China (which had been polio-free since 1999). In Africa, active polio transmission continues in Nigeria, Chad and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, with outbreaks in West and Central Africa in the past 12 months reminding the world that as long as polio exists anywhere, it remains a threat everywhere. Lieven Desomer, Polio Chief, UNICEF India, said, “The key challenge now is to ensure any residual or imported poliovirus in the country is rapidly detected and eliminated. This requires very high levels of vigilance and emergency preparedness to respond to any importation of wild poliovirus.”

In an e-mail response to The Hindu , Nata Menabde, WHO Representative to India, explained, “India must now capitalise on this progress and secure polio eradication. It must continue to protect children in polio campaigns and through improved routine immunisation coverage. Complacency is not a luxury the program can afford; continued high level vigilance for polio, emergency preparedness, and intense immunisation activities will be essential for rapid detection and elimination of any circulating poliovirus.
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A Major Milestone in Polio Eradication- T. Jacob John in The Hindu

Really, phenomenal work by everyone in this massive project. Hats off for their dedication and sincerity.
Today, India passes one whole year without polio caused by natural (wild) poliovirus — a major milestone towards polio eradication. This spells relief from an agonising decade of wild polioviruses refusing to surrender. Many experts believed that India posed the greatest challenge to polio eradication for epidemiological reasons; our success proves it can be achieved in other countries where the obstacles are more programmatic than biological. For the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), this is a shot in the arm.

The decade of agony

The year 2000 was the target date for global eradication set by the World Health Assembly in 1988. Intense efforts by countries, guided by GPEI, resulted in success in most countries and partial success in all countries. Of the 3 types of polioviruses, type 2 was globally eradicated in 1999 — with the last case in Uttar Pradesh. But transmission of types 1 and 3 continued in six countries. Later, two more succeeded, leaving India, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria with continuing transmission beyond 2005. In India, during the last decade, over 95 per cent of cases occurred in U.P. and Bihar — arguably the world's most difficult spots for eradication. In 2000 and 2001, there were 265 and 268 cases but in 2002 an outbreak occurred with 1600 cases, mostly type 1. Then, the numbers dwindled to 225 and 134 in 2003 and 2004, and 66 in 2005. All hopes of success were shattered by another polio outbreak in 2006, with 648 cases of type 1 and 28 of type 3 polio.

Since type 1 showed a cyclical nature of outbreaks every fourth year — 1998, 2002 and 2006 — the next outbreak in 2010 had to be averted at all costs. Type 2 had taught us that sequential eradication of one type at a time was realistic. So type 1 was targeted and the tactics paid off — we had less than 100 cases each during 2007-2009, 18 in 2010 and just one case on January 13, 2011 — none since.

Type 3 cases were less than 10 in 2004 and 2005. Unfortunately, while type 1 was singled out for attack, type 3 outbreaks developed, first in Bihar (2007-08) and then in U.P. (2008-09). So in 2010, there was yet another change of tactic, now focussing on type 3 along with type 1. There were 24 cases of type 3 in 2010 and none in 2011. In U.P., the last wild virus polio was reported on April 21, 2010 and in Bihar on September 1, 2010 — both type 3. So we have now come 20 months without a case in U.P. and 15 months in Bihar. The case of January 13, 2011, was reported not from U.P. or Bihar, but from Howrah in West Bengal.

Problems & innovative solutions

By 1988, nearly 70 countries had achieved the elimination of wild poliovirus transmission through their routine national immunisation programmes, some using the inactivated poliovirus vaccine (IPV) but others using the oral poliovirus vaccine (OPV). For countries with polio, the World Health Organisation recommended the exclusive use of OPV for its low cost and ease of inoculation by mouth — as two drops. On the flip side, the very fact that many countries using OPV could not control polio with routine immunisation indicated that it was not as effective as in other countries. The difference was clear: tropical/ subtropical countries with low income, overcrowding, high birth rates, and high child mortality faced low effectiveness of OPV, whereas those with the opposites had high vaccine effectiveness.

In India, the disparities of such factors spelt differential effectiveness among States. Not only did some communities exhibit lower vaccine effectiveness, they also had more intense wild virus transmission. The conjunction of both problems made U.P. and Bihar stand out as the most difficult regions for polio eradication. Indian scientists had actually warned the GPEI of such pitfalls but global leaders from rich countries couldn't believe that such extreme variations could exist with wild virus epidemiology and vaccine effectiveness. Once that lesson was learned, the progress was rapid.

Wild polioviruses exist in 3 types, and OPV also contains attenuated strains of the 3 types. So it is called trivalent OPV (tOPV). Among the 3 types, type 2 is the most efficient; that was why type 2 wild virus disappeared in 1999, within a few years of national pulse vaccinations. But type 2 in the tOPV also interferes with the others, making them very inefficient. From 2000, the frequency of campaigns with tOPV was increased in U.P. and Bihar, but to no avail. Type 2 had to be removed from tOPV to get the best out of types 1 and 3. In 2005 and thereafter, a new monovalent type 1 OPV (mOPV-1) was used in U.P. and Bihar — it is three times more effective than tOPV. This was one factor of success. But gaps in immunity were created against type 3; consequently, type 3 outbreaks occurred in 2007-2009. Then, a bivalent vaccine (bOPV with 1 and 3) was developed. It was non-inferior to mOPV-1 or mOPV-3. From early 2010, bOPV has been widely used in U.P. and Bihar during campaigns, while tOPV is used everywhere for routine immunisation.

While the problem of “failure of vaccine” was being addressed, there was also the problem of “failure to vaccinate”. Seasonally, millions of families from U.P. and Bihar migrate for work — some to Maharashtra or Punjab, others within their States. Their children missed both routine and campaign doses. The tactic of vaccination in transit — in trains/buses and in stone quarries/brick kilns — became the norm from 2005. As all bottlenecks were cleared, success ensued.

Tribute to the nation

Many global experts marvel at the ability of Indians to work with diligence and sincerity, and at India's tenacity in spite of pessimistic prophecies of failure. So a tribute is due: to the families of children and all workers, district managers — medical and administrative — State leadership, the National Polio Surveillance Project personnel, the Government of India staff working alongside the global polio partners, WHO, UNICEF, Rotary International and the U.S. Centres for Disease Control, and the vaccine manufacturers who up-scaled production on demand, and filled the prescriptions for mOPV-1 and 3 and for bOPV. All of them deserve our applause and gratitude.

In many other programmes in India, poor implementation is the oft-repeated reason for failures and delays. The success of implementation depends on the design of the programme and proper supervision of activities. The government must learn and apply this lesson in all other faltering health projects — against TB, malaria, child mortality and under-nutrition.

What next?

For certification of eradication, two more years should pass without any case of wild virus polio. Poliovirus can remain silently in circulation for short periods; so, complacency must not set in. We must continue working as if we still have poliovirus lurking somewhere, only to show up when least expected. There is also the threat of importation of wild virus from Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nigeria.

Vaccine viruses by themselves can rarely cause polio; the balance is roughly one case of vaccine-associated paralytic polio (VAPP) replacing 200 cases of wild virus polio. Yet, in the absence of wild virus polio, VAPP is unacceptable. Moreover, vaccine viruses may gradually revert to wild-like properties if allowed to circulate. Such circulating vaccine-derived polioviruses (cVDPV) cropped up in many OPV-using countries recently, including India since 2009. If allowed to grow, they can capture the niche vacated by wild viruses. We have to stop OPV to stop VAPP, but some cVDPV may already be in silent circulation to show up in outbreaks one or more years later. The safest solution is to introduce IPV, reach 90 per cent or more coverage and only then stop OPV. That will pre-empt the evolution of cVDPVs. Only after we ensure the absence of wild and vaccine polioviruses in the population can we claim complete success of polio eradication. That is the challenge of the present decade.

(The author was professor of clinical virology in the Christian Medical College, Vellore until retirement, and has served on several Global and National Committees on Immunisation and Polio Eradication.)
SSridhar
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Re: Indian Health Care Sector

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A Year after being detected with Polio, she walks - The Hindu

The accompanying picture above shows a healthy girl child.
Two-and-a-half-year-old Rukhsar, the last reported case of wild polio in India, leans over the side of the wooden frame on which her mother, Zubeida Bibi, works painstakingly on a zardosi sari. Rukhsar's stance makes one wonder if she needs the support to stand.

The reality could not be more different. Exactly a year after it was detected that Rukhsar was infected with the wild polio virus, she walks with the slightest limp, undetectable to the untrained eye. A scar on her left calf — less than an inch in width — appears to be the only evidence that she was ever afflicted.

“Rukhsar had just about started standing up when she fell ill as an 18-month-old baby. After two months at the Infectious Diseases hospital at Belighata [in Kolkata], she returned home. Within another couple of months, she started walking,” says Abdul Shah, her father, on Friday.

Delicate child

From the time of her birth, Rukhsar had been a delicate child, frequently suffering from stomach upsets — the reason that she had not been immunised with the oral polio vaccine, he adds.

But in the course of the last year, Rukhsar has become the face of the polio immunisation campaign in Sahapara and the neighbouring areas of Panchla Block in the State's Howrah district.

A year ago there were about 30 families in the locality that refused to allow their children to be immunised. At present there are only three families that continue to resist,” says Sheik Amin-ud-din, a United National Children's Fund (UNICEF) volunteer who works in the polio eradication programme.

Abdul Shah himself has been speaking to people in the area urging them to allow volunteers to administer the oral polio vaccine to their children. He regrets that his daughter missed out on the vaccine, recounting with horror, the long hours that Rukhsar's body burned with fever, her leg swollen as she lay listless at home.

Rukhsar's elder sister and brother, both of them school-going toddlers, had been immunised. But Rukhsar was a sickly child, continually suffering from diarrhoea or some other ailment. On all the days that the vaccine was being given out, she was invariably unwell, Mr. Shah says.

Arjina Khatoon, another UNICEF volunteer in the neighbouring Chara Panchla gram panchayat area, has never met Rukhsar or her family. But Rukhsar's photographs have become an integral part of her campaign among the residents of her village.

In the rounds we conducted in Chara Panchla in February 2010, 87 families had refused the vaccination. As news of Rukhsar's affliction spread this number has now reduced to 64 families,” she adds.
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Re: Indian Health Care Sector

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small pox vaccination
Centuries ago, in India, inoculation to prevent smallpox with cowpox virus was practiced by the Hindoos, and an accurate description of the procedure is given in an ancient Hindoo medical work.* The art, however, like many another practiced by the ancients (erroneously termed barbarians), became lost to the world until revived many centuries later in England by Jenner, whose name will possess lasting renown so long as the present medical records endure. Jenner's discovery, the result partly of accident, but also of close observation, laid the corner stone for preventive vaccination and serum therapy as practiced to-day.
*"Take the liquid of the pustules of the cow's teat, or from the area of a human being between the shoulder and the elbow; place it upon the point of a lancet and introduce it in the area at the same place, mixing the fluid with the blood; the fever of variola will be produced. This disease will be mild like the animal from which it is derived. It need not cause fear and requires no remedies; the patient may be given the food he desires."—Sacteya Grautham (a Hindoo Book of Medicine).
got the info from shadow warrior blog.
did not know that our ancestors had done the pioneering work here.
Varoon Shekhar
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Re: Indian Health Care Sector

Post by Varoon Shekhar »

^^^
Good info. We have heard of the works of Sushruta and Charaka. But there must have been many more medical texts, such as the one referred to here "Sacteya Grautham". And there must be interesting medical knowledge displayed in some of them.
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Re: Indian Health Care Sector

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Tulsi mitigates radiation effects
The ancient Indian tradition of growing tulsi (Ocimum sanctum) in the backyard is not without scientific backing.
Research shows that the tulsi, or Indian basil, mitigates the ill-effects of radiation, whether background or nuclear, and could protect cells in patients undergoing radiation therapy for cancer.
Scientists at the DRDO’s Institute of Nuclear Medicines and Allied Sciences, and the Department of Radiobiology, Kasturba Medical College, Manipal, have successfully tested tulsi extracts on mice for its anti-radiation and anti-cancer properties. The DRDO is now preparing a herbal concoction from tulsi that will serve to both prevent and cure the ill-effects of radiation.
krisna
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Devi Shetty takes affordable health care closer to US
In a first for the Indian medicare industry, Dr Shetty will be setting up a super-speciality hospital on the biggest of the three-island group, Grand Cayman. The Cayman Islands are a noted financial centre and tax haven, and the facility will beef up the islands’ medical infrastructure and boost medical tourism there.
India-trained doctors and nurses will be among the 100 doctors and 600 nurses to man the first phase of Dr Shetty’s project. “Doctors trained in India have to often take exams to qualify to practise in countries like the US and the UK. But the Cayman Islands was the first country to recognise our degrees, and we had insisted on this being one of the conditions for us to work there. There will be India-trained doctors in the facility,” he said.
Among the conditions in the MoU, the Cayman government is required to provide water at a price acceptable to the company, including a preferential rate for a fixed period of time.
great going.
SSridhar
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krisna wrote:Devi Shetty takes affordable health care closer to US
But the Cayman Islands was the first country to recognise our degrees, and we had insisted on this being one of the conditions for us to work there. There will be India-trained doctors in the facility,” he said.
great going.
Excellent. Recently, I understand that the UK recognized Indian CAs. Medicine would be the next step. But, recognition may depend upon degrees of certain institutions being recognized, not across the board.
SSridhar
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Risky obsession with dietary supplements among Indians
College admissions on the sports quota and body building are driving youngsters to consume dietary supplements and steroids in urban India, with about 78 per cent of the adolescents taking at least one supplement such as pills, energy drinks, steroids and high protein stuff. These supplements, easily available in the market, can be very harmful if taken without expert guidance.

The statistics are shocking as many children are becoming overly involved and obsessed with substances that promise to boost energy, appearance, performance, immunity and overall health even if they shorten their lives.

According to a survey, over 85 per cent of school and college athletes said their coaches and fitness trainers encouraged them to take supplements similar to steroids to perform well. They further said these drugs were easily available easily at any chemist.

Study in major cities

The ASSOCHAM Social Development Foundation (ASDF) team conducted the survey on the “Ill-effects of energy drinks and other popular dietary supplements on youngsters” in major States and cities — Delhi-NCR, Mumbai, Haryana, Kolkata, Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Chandigarh, Jaipur and Lucknow — during October 2011-January 2012. The team interacted with around 2,500 adolescents (almost an equal number of male and female) in the age group 14-30.

Interestingly, consumption of dietary supplements is more in vogue in Delhi-NCR and Mumbai followed by Haryana, Chandigarh, Hyderabad and Ahmedabad.

The use of steroids increased with age, especially among boys. Almost 45 per cent of 12th grade male students reported steroid use. Some students said they were taking other supplements to boost their game or physical appearance. Forty-seven per cent said they had used protein powders, creatine and amino acids to gain body mass. Around 55 per cent said they had used fat burners, high-energy drinks and caffeine pills in an attempt to lose weight.

The survey showed that the participants were consuming sports drinks (86 per cent), vitamin and mineral tablets (75 per cent), energy drinks (65 per cent), herbal supplements (25 per cent), high protein milk supplements (15 per cent) and steroids (76 per cent). The majority of the participants indicated that their fitness trainers promoted and sold the dietary supplements.

Side-effects

There are a number of side-effects caused by the supplements: abdominal pain, nausea, loose stools, increase in weight due to retention of water, muscle cramps and muscle strains. Reduction in kidney function and enlargement of the heart muscle have been observed in young folks. Females can become masculinised, with excessive hair growth, enlargement of the clitoris and loss of hair (seen in males also).

Around 82 per cent teenagers admitted that fitness trainers and coaches influenced them to use the drugs, referred to as calcium tablet and vitamin supplements, to perform well. More than 75 per cent of the steroid users said they were willing to take extreme risks to reach sports stardom or other athletic goals. Seventy five percent prefer to use a pill or powder, including dietary supplements, even if it is harmful to the extent of shortening life.

The survey disclosed that youngsters often consumed these drinks before workouts to enhance performance. Energy drinks consumed before or during a workout can lead to dehydration, tremors, heat stroke and even heart attack.

“A group of nutritionists said there is a huge demand seeing more and more students asking for supplements that are alternatives to steroids advised [as] builders by their coaches,” points out the survey.

Most popular energy drinks contain high levels of caffeine, sometimes in combination with other stimulants such as ephedra. It has been shown to increase endurance, improve alertness and concentration, reduce perceived exertion and pain, and enhance performance in some sports. However, at high doses it poses a number of risks, including increased heart rate, changes in heart rhythm, dehydration, sleep problems and addiction, says the survey.
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