GREETINGS Union Health Minister J P Nadda, We seem destined, your ministry and I, to be working in conjunction for more than a decade now for the benefit of Indians in matters of health. Credit to the government, especially to the bureaucrats in the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, for bringing about farreaching changes—be it by banning commercial surrogacy; by stopping young women’s bodies from being hyper-stimulated with chemical steroids to be medically mined for oocytes/eggs that are being sold in the national and international markets; or by regulating exploitative ivf (in vitro fertilisation) and controlling 3pr (third-party reproduction) in ivf where sperm was being commercially sold and even switched—without the knowledge of the intending parents—to “improve” the average 75 per cent failure rate in artificial human reproduction.
Denne historien er fra October 16, 2024-utgaven av Down To Earth.
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Denne historien er fra October 16, 2024-utgaven av Down To Earth.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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The Golden 100 Days
India prepares battle blueprint for the next pandemic
CULINARY MASTERPIECE
The sour culinary melon from southern India remains underutilised despite nutritional benefits and a potential to provide food security
Over to panchayats
Can the government's move to align panchayat targets with UN's Sustainable Development Goals help India meet the global deadline?
Genetic rescue
Odisha to introduce two female tigers to Similipal forests to improve genetic diversity of its melanistic tiger population
Standing up for period rights
Women of Maharashtra's Madia tribe take steps to root out superstitions about menstruation, end the practice of living in isolation
PUT THE PATIENT FIRST
Draft guidelines on passive euthanasia exclude the interests of terminally ill patients: A letter to the Union health minister
Dead end
West Bengal moves to discontinue Kolkata’s trams despite calls to revive the city’s oldest and cleanest mode of transport
A river lost
Unchecked discharge of industrial effluents and inadequate sewage treatment facilities have turned the Hindon water toxic. ROHINI KRISHNAMURTHY tracks the river's journey though seven Uttar Pradesh districts, starting from its origin in Saharanpur
RECKLESS DISREGARD
India is set to expand seaweed cultivation along its coastline by promoting Kappaphycus alvarezii, a known invasive species that has smothered coral reefs in the Gulf of Mannar over the past two decades. Should the country instead focus on its native species?
Joining The Carbon Club
India's carbon market will soon be a reality, but will it fulfil its aim of reducing emissions? A report by PARTH KUMAR and MANAS AGRAWAL