- Doctors with foreign degrees flunk test in India
Only 4% of new docs in India are allopaths - Times of India
epaper.timesofindia.com/.../getFiles.asp?Style...english... Why should homeopaths, ayurvedic & other doctors be allowed to ...
www.indiastudychannel.com › Forums › General › MiscellaneousHomeopaths can do one-year course, prescribe allopathy drugs ...
www.firstpost.com › India NewsNow, unani, ayurveda practitioners can prescribe allopathy medicines ...
indianexpress.com › cities › mumbai
An indian minor boy sit on a road side medicine shop with his ...www.gettyimages.com
An indian minor boy sit on a road side medicine shop with his master as he helps his master to make medicine and selling,on World day against child labour ...
Health in India - Healing with Amulets and Antibiotics | Max ...
ROAD SIDE ENT DOCTOR
India's Roadside Clinic: Open Air Bloodletting - YouTubewww.youtube.com
India's Roadside Clinic: Open Air Bloodletting
Roadside Street Doctors Are A Thriving Business in India - Medical ...
ducknetweb.blogspot.com
US but we don't see doctors on the street with a small outdoor office and practice. The doctors use many herbs to help consult and “cure” in their words ...
Business in India
Roadside Street Doctors Are A Thriving Business in India
I had to read this one twice when I looked at the numbers quoted, there are twice as many “quack doctors” as qualified doctors in the country. It is against the law to practice medicine without a license but enforcement efforts or small or don’t exist. They also pay “bribe” money to be left alone and if the heat rises, they move to another location.
The Street Doctors state they use traditional methods of healing and help the poor who cannot afford private healthcare. We have problems in the US but we don’t see doctors on the street with a small outdoor office and practice. The doctors use many herbs to help consult and “cure” in their words problems as major as paralysis. Again, the numbers of Street Doctors when I read this article is mind boggling compared to licensed physicians. BD
New Delhi, India (CNN) -- Sitting on an iron bench along a busy street, Chaman Lal sticks his fingers into a mug full of a greasy concoction and then applies the dark-red brew to areas where his patients complain of pain.
Roadside doctors with no degrees thrive in India - CNN.com
Lal -- who does not have a license to practice medicine, but claims to be a successful bone doctor and traditional healer -- says this potion of 18 herbs is a cure-all. His large signboard, placed along the roadside, claims he can even treat paralysis.
Part of India's massive informal economy, these street-side medicine men and women are called quacks by the medical association here -- but they say they are traditional healers. They cater to a huge market of poor people who cannot afford costly private health care. The number of such practitioners is unknown.
"There's no firm estimate, but I can say that for every 100,000 qualified doctors in our country, there are 200,000 quacks," said Ashok Adhao, president of the Indian Medical Association. "The practice is condemnable."
"We do face problems when police and municipal officers come. But we manage it" by paying bribes, said Shiv Kumar, a caretaker of a sexual disorder-treatment clinic.
Rajiv Singh, a clinic owner lying on a cot outside and under a bridge of New Delhi's prestigious Metro rail, said if his business starts to fall off, he will simply break camp and look for another location with potential new clients. Here, such a move is not a big deal.
He also said the work he and others like him are doing is effective.
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
Doctors with foreign degrees flunk test in India= homeopahs/ayurveds to practise english medicine
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment