9 results match your criteria: "NALSAR University of Law[Affiliation]"

The present study intends to examine whether there exists any gender gap in out-of-pocket spending on hospitalization between elderly men and elderly women. Data were drawn from the NSS 75th Round Health Care Survey (2017-2018) consisting of a total number of 45,299 elderly. Bivariate analysis and t-test were used to examine the disease burden and gender gap in health spending.

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Background: Stress is a pivotal aspect of organizational psychology. Although an individual's attitude and behaviour at work have received greater investigation, scant attention has been given to family-related dynamics and their impact on work.

Objective: This study contributes to understanding work-family dynamics by investigating the connection between family incivility and job dissatisfaction during the pandemic.

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Asia is responsible for ~60% of global egg production. As in most of the world, nearly all of the egg-laying hens are housed in cages. While there is growing demand for cage-free eggs in many regions of the world, challenges have been reported when transitioning to these systems, which may affect the willingness of producers to transition.

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Knowledge about Informed Consent among Doctors of Various Specialities: A Pilot Survey.

J Assoc Physicians India

October 2018

1 Student, NALSAR University of Law, Justice City, Shameerpet, Hyderabad, Telangana; 2 Student, 3 Statistician, 4Professor and Head of Cardiology, Dayanand Medical College and Hospital, Ludhiana, Punjab; Corresponding Author.

Background: Informed consent is an integral part of clinical practice. Improper informed consent can lead to mistrust between doctors and patients as well as medico-legal issues. Awareness and knowledge of various aspects of consent is essential in present day medical practice.

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Impact of UNCRPD on the status of persons with disabilities.

Indian J Med Ethics

December 2011

NALSAR University of Law, Hyderabad AP 500 078, India.

The sanctity of human life is a fundamental human value and the medical profession has been ethically charged with respecting and enhancing the value of all human beings' lives. However, disability-selective abortion has been perceived as an acceptable health intervention to eliminate disabilities, and is provided for in law as well as in policies and healthcare programmes related to disability. Advanced medical technologies are being utilised not to maximise the lives of persons with disabilities but to prevent the birth of disabled people by medically terminating foetuses diagnosed with disability.

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Organ transplant and presumed consent: towards an "opting out" system.

Indian J Med Ethics

September 2009

NALSAR University of Law, Shameerpet, R.R. District, Hyderabad 500078, India.

This paper examines the "opt out" system of organ donation wherein the State permits removal of tissue and organs posthumously unless an express objection is made by the person prior to the death. This paper examines the need for "presumed consent" and the jurisprudential arguments in support of it. The social contract theory and the sociological approach based on the principle of "common good" support this system.

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Negligence in a sterilisation operation is a crucial issue in a country like India where sterilisation operations form an important part of government programmes. This article seeks to highlight the medico-legal dilemmas that surround this issue, and the legal pronouncements on it. The article also deals with a recent policy initiative--the Family Planning Insurance Scheme--that has been formulated in this regard, its legal implications, and its impact on the medical fraternity as well as on society as a whole.

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Laws that regulate the identification of a foetus and the termination of a pregnancy in India are shaped by their social context. The Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971, discriminates against unmarried women by not recognising that unwanted pregnancies in unmarried women could result in at least as much anguish and suffering as that experienced by married women. While the MTP Act permits the abortion of foetuses with disabilities, the Pre-conception and Pre-natal Diagnostic Techniques (Prohibition of Sex Selection) Act's ban on identifying the foetus's sex prevents the use of sex-detection to identify foetuses at high risk of sex-linked diseases.

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