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China's human rightsrecord getting worse: USambassador

Out of your hatred against China, now you inadvertently ejaculated your trading secret?



You must have taken your poor's kindey in winter? :tdown:

The article talks about legal organ donation. talk about education :lol:
 
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you have this right

Indians as guinea pigs: Clinical trials killed 1,600 people in the past two years; only 22 compensated for fatalities
September 28, 2011 12:06 PM | Bookmark and Share
Vinita Deshmukh
Directorate General of Health Services

It took five months for the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) to reply to Hisar-based RTI activist Ramesh Verma to tell him the gory truth about how multinational pharmaceutical companies play with the lives of Indians during clinical trials and almost never bother to pay compensation

Here are a few shocking facts that will expose the extent of the rot in the Indian pharma industry, and more important, how multinational (MNC) pharma companies toy around with the lives of Indians.

Number of dead between the year 2008 and 2010 due to clinical trials of various drugs by multinational companies in India is 1,600!
The compensation paid by pharmaceutical companies including Merck, Wyeth, Bayer, Pfizer, Amgen, Lilly, Sanofi, PPD, Quintiles and Bristol Myers is for only 22 of the 1,600 who died (as per information, all these 22 people died in 2010). The compensation together, totals to a mere Rs53.30 lakh (at an average of Rs.1.50 lakh to Rs2 lakh. One company by the name of PPD has paid Rs10 lakh—perhaps for the death of more than one person (and this is only an estimate).
288 people lost their lives in 2008; 637 people died in 2009 and 668 died in 2010.
No of registered trials: 11 between July and December 2007; 137 between January and December 2008; 548 between January and December 2009; 806 between January and December 2010 (note the increase in the number of people volunteering for clinical trials over the last three years).

This shocking information was revealed by the Directorate General of Health Services (DGHS) to Hisar-based RTI (Right to Information) activist Ramesh Verma, who has filed more than 500 RTI applications, most of them pertaining to health issues.

It took five months for the DGHS to finally bow down to transparency after the Central Information Commission (CIC) slammed it for not providing the required information by its PIO (Public Information Officer). Besides giving the PIO a show-cause notice for penalty under Section 20 (1) and (2) of the RTI Act, the CIC ordered that information be given to Mr Verma before 25 September 2011. Accordingly, he was provided information on 23rd September. However, he has still not received complete information and is now filing his complaint again to CIC Shailesh Gandhi.

Verma asked the following queries in his RTI application:

1. In the past 10 years, approvals for clinical trials have been given for which drugs... Please give names of the drugs, name of the pharmaceutical company, name of the research organisation conducting trials, conditions on which such trials have been approved.
2. What are the mandatory requirements for the organisation which conducts such clinical trials?
3. Sample copy of written approval by the member of the family of the person who would be undergoing the clinical trial of the drug.
4. Details of the compensation paid in case of harm caused to the person during the course of trials. How many people have received how much compensation in the last 10 years?
5. How many complaints have been received in the last 10 years regarding clinical trials and copy of action taken against such complaints.
6. How many deaths have occurred during such clinical trials and details of compensation given—along with names of the companies.

But the shocking fact is that there is no basic figure of financial compensation fixed for monetary compensation for these pharma companies despite the fact that they are playing with the lives and health of people.

Regarding details of compensation, the DGHS in its reply quoted from the Good Clinical Practices Guidelines (GCP) recognised under Schedule Y to the Drugs and Cosmetics Rules issued by the DGHS, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, which prescribes:

"The compensation for accidental injury for Research subjects who suffer physical injury as a result of their participation in clinical trial... are entitled to financial or other assistance to compensate them equitably for any temporary or permanent or disability subject to confirmation from IEC. In case of death, their dependents are entitled to material compensation.

"Obligations of the sponsor to pay: The sponsor whether a pharmaceutical company, a government or an institution should agree, before the research begins, to provide compensation for any serious physical or mental injury for which subjects are entitled to compensation or agree to provide insurance coverage for an unforeseen injury whenever possible.''

Regarding complaints received from those adversely affected by clinical trials, DGHS replied: "As per available records, one complaint was received from R Rajendran, Sivakasi, regarding clinical trial of Vitreosolve injection in patients with non-proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy. The matter is sub-judice in the High Court of Judicature of Madras at Madurai Bench in Writ Petition (MD) No 9894 of 2010 filed by R Rajendran, son of A Raju…"

Regarding deaths due to clinical trials, the DGHS provided information only of the past three years and not 10 years as asked by Mr Verma, stating: "Serious adverse events of deaths may occur during clinical trials due to various reasons. These could be disease related deaths like cancer etc or administration to critical or terminally ill patients or side effects or unrelated causes. Such deaths are investigated for causal relationship by investigator and by Medical Monitor of sponsor. The information collated revealed that there were 288 deaths in 2008, 637 in 2009 and 668 in 2010... There were 22 cases of deaths which were related to clinical trial in the year 2010 where compensation has been provided by company."

Regarding the norms of clinical trials, DGHS replies: "[The] number of clinical trials actually conducted in government hospitals/private hospitals is not available with Central Drugs Standard Control Organisations (CDSCO) as prior to 17.11.2008 registration of clinical trial was voluntary. For all clinical trials, permission of which was granted between 17.11.2008 to 14.05.2009, applicants were advised to get the trials registered at ICMR registry at Clinical Trial Registry - India.

"However, for all clinical trials permitted on or after 15.06.2009, applicants are being informed that it is now mandatory to register the trial at the said ICMR site before enrolling first patient in the study."
 
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You dont know the meaning of human rights. No wonder china's human right records are worse

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your meaning of HR is killing 2,000,000 children a year?

Incredible India, indeed!

Better find a less worse definition of HR in your dictionary.
 
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hope you Indians can grow up to practice human rights.

yes, there are no grown ups in India :lol:

---------- Post added at 02:02 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:01 PM ----------

your meaning of HR is killing 2,000,000 children a year?

Incredible India, indeed!

Better find a less worse definition of HR in your dictionary.

again look up the meaning of 'killing'
 
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‘Poor, illiterate Indians becoming guinea pigs’
Last Updated: Monday, November 14, 2011,17:46
‘Poor, illiterate Indians becoming guinea pigs’

London: Pharmaceutical companies in the West have seized on developing countries like India over the past five years as a testing ground for drugs, where the research costs for lucrative products to be sold in the Western nations are very low.

According to the Independent, after the relaxation of restrictions on drug trials in 2005, this business has swollen to such a point in India today that over 150,000 people are involved in at least 1,600 clinical trials, which are conducted on behalf of British, American and European firms including AstraZeneca, Pfizer, and Merck.

Between 2007 and 2010, nearly 1,730 people died in India while, or after, participating in such trials, which according to the paper, may be worth as much as 189 million pounds.

Various incidents of such drug trials were carried out in the states of Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh, as well as in Delhi, the paper said.

The trials involved the recruitment of hundreds of tribal girls without parental consent for an immunisation study that was sponsored by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

It involved the use of survivors of the poisonous gas disaster in Bhopal as “guinea pigs” in at least 11 trials by drug companies without proper informed consent.

Also, a police investigation in Indore found that dozens of private trials by doctors at a government hospital in the city ‘violated the ethical guidelines’. The doctors who conducted the trials decided that not one of 81 cases in which a participant suffered an adverse effect was linked to the treatment.

Campaigners have pointed out that India is a particularly attractive location for researchers not simply because of the lax regulations, but also because of the size and genetic diversity of the 1.2 billion population.

Added to this, almost all doctors speak some English. The infrastructure for such trials, often in the form of government hospitals, is widely available.

According to the paper, India is just one of many developing countries used by leading Western pharmaceutical companies that spent 40 billion pounds in 2010 on research and development.

ANI
 
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yes, there are no grown ups in India :lol:

---------- Post added at 02:02 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:01 PM ----------



again look up the meaning of 'killing'

how can you expect to look up anything? He thinks his GOVT selling organs is the same as criminals selling organs worldwide... he equates his govt to be at the same level and mentality. How can you expect to know the meaning of " killing" vs .... . 'LOL' chini style
 
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Yup. Starving children to death is legal in India. Making India a kidney Bazzar is legal in India. Burning people to death because they marry a diffferent caste is legal in India...

We know it.

you mean in China no one died of hunger ever ? Was it legal then ? No one ever donates organs to the needy in China ? Is it illegal ?
 
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The chiense are so dumb that they compare open free media articles vs. borg censored machine. Open free media allows it to be discussed and checked in India . closed media allows 30 million people to starve to death in china , 100,000 to die every time the earth shakes a little bit in China ... yet govt tries it's best to cover it up . ask you commi loving , human rights shame stain of a country why they don't allow themselves to be audited...

the Chinese are so dumb that they they think comparison studies equates to one side being benchmarked and audited only...

---------- Post added at 01:30 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:28 PM ----------



the chinese are so dumb that they don't know the difference between their GOVT selling Organs vs Criminals.... China 'selling prisoners' organs' China Admits Selling Prisoners’ Organs - ABC News

LOL!

This "high IQ" Indian doesn't know your GOI is a criminal organization?
 
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Human rights in India
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Recent reports from the Working Group on Human Rights (WGHR) in India indicate human rights in the country are dismal.In its report on human rights in India during 2010, Human Rights Watch stated India had "significant human rights problems".[4] They identified lack of accountability for security forces and impunity for abusive policing including "police brutality, extrajudicial killings, and torture" as major problems. An independent United Nations expert in 2011 expressed concern that she found human rights workers and their families who "have been killed, tortured, ill-treated, disappeared, threatened, arbitrarily arrested and detained, falsely charged and under surveillance because of their legitimate work in upholding human rights and fundamental freedoms.[5]

A 1996 Human Rights Watch report accuses the Indian military and Indian-government backed paramilitaries of "committ[ing] serious and widespread human rights violations in Kashmir."[17] One such alleged massacre occurred on January 6, 1993 in the town of Sopore. TIME Magazine described the incident as such: "In retaliation for the killing of one soldier, paramilitary forces rampaged through Sopore's market setting buildings ablaze and shooting bystanders. The Indian government pronounced the event 'unfortunate' and claimed that an ammunition dump had been hit by gunfire, setting off fires that killed most of the victims."[18] In addition to this, there have been claims of disappearances by the police or the army in Kashmir by several human rights organizations.[19][20]

Many human rights organizations such as Amnesty International and the Human Rights Watch (HRW) have condemned human rights abuses in Kashmir by Indians such as "extra-judicial executions", "disappearances", and torture;[21] the "Armed Forces Special Powers Act", which "provides impunity for human rights abuses and fuels cycles of violence. The Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) grants the military wide powers of arrest, the right to shoot to kill, and to occupy or destroy property in counterinsurgency operations. Indian officials claim that troops need such powers because the army is only deployed when national security is at serious risk from armed combatants. Such circumstances, they say, call for extraordinary measures." Human rights organizations have also asked Indian government to repeal[22] the Public Safety Act, since "a detainee may be held in administrative detention for a maximum of two years without a court order."

According to the estimates of Reporters Without Borders, India ranks 122nd worldwide in 2010 on the press freedom index (down from 105th in 2009). The press freedom index for India is 38.75 in 2010 (29.33 for 2009) on a scale that runs from 0 (most free) to 105 (least free).[25][26]

The Indian Constitution, while not mentioning the word "press", provides for "the right to freedom of speech and expression" (Article 19(1) a). However this right is subject to restrictions under subclause (2), whereby this freedom can be restricted for reasons of "sovereignty and integrity of India, the security of the State, friendly relations with foreign States, public order, preserving decency, preserving morality, in relation to contempt of court, defamation, or incitement to an offence". Laws such as the Official Secrets Act and Prevention of Terrorism Act [27] (POTA) have been used to limit press freedom. Under POTA, person could be detained for up to six months before the police were required to bring charges on allegations for terrorism-related offenses. POTA was repealed in 2004, but was replaced by amendments to UAPA.[28] The Official Secrets Act 1923 is abolished after right to information act 2005

For the first half-century of independence, media control by the state was the major constraint on press freedom. Indira Gandhi famously stated in 1975 that All India Radio is "a Government organ, it is going to remain a Government organ..." [29
 
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Upon recently having killed a Duck for dinner . Gpit was heard saying " Thug Life Thug Life, westsideeee"...:rofl:
 
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this coming from an ambassador whose country kills humans like lab rats every where around the world--
 
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why do chinese troll on forums

ans - so they could feed there starving families through the 50 cent they earn for each troll post
 
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why do chinese troll on forums

ans - so they could feed there starving families through the 50 cent they earn for each troll post

50 cent means a lot in India,not enough to buy a piece of toilet paper in China.maybe that's the reason you Indian trolling here for.
 
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