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Banerji D |
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Medical practice in India: Its sociological implications.
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ANTISEPTIC 1962, 59, 125-129. |
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Per |
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Before the advent of western system of medicine
in the eighteenth century, the practice of the empirical indigenous
system of medicine of very high standard was in vogue in India.
However, with growing industrialization in Europe allopathic system
made spectacular progress of which Indian sub continent could not
remain unaffected during British rule. As a result, indigenous systems
of medicine declined and became more or less cult of the quacks.
Only a small fraction of the educated Indians have a chance to acquire
knowledge of western medicine and only a few could afford to avail
these services while millions of Indians living all over the country
had very little use of very advanced medical institutions based
in big cities. Even after 14 years of political independence India
continues to be the home of preventable epidemics as well as has
high incidence of innumerable communicable diseases. Extreme poverty
is perhaps the most important factor responsible for the poor state
of health of the people in India. A plan for having better nutrition,
better water supply, housing and better education will certainly
result in great improvement in the national health. In the initial
stage of social development all efforts should be directed to provide
basic elementary medical and public health services to the entire
population. The doctor going to work in an interior village in India
must have a wide and varied knowledge of the preventive and curative
aspects of medicine, all specialization rolled into one. The state
must provide free medical care to all, particularly to the poor.
In the concept of socialized medicine there is no place of top sided
approach of having highly trained doctors who have nothing to offer
to the public other than some useless mixtures. What is urgently
needed is a social transformation of the practice of public health
and medicine in India.
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KEYWORDS: SOCIAL MEDICINE; SOCIAL WELFARE; INDIA. |