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Public Health / Sanitation

PMC health dept seeks govt stand on device to track sonography machines

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The Indian Express    31.07.2012

PMC health dept seeks govt stand on device to track sonography machines

The Pune Municipal Corporation’s health department has written to the state authority seeking details on the status of active tracker, a device that can be fitted in ultrasound machines to review scanned images of a pregnant woman and help check illegal sex selection.

The project to install active tracker also known as the silent observer was part of an initiative introduced by the state in May 2010. It consists of a software and a device which when installed in a sonography machine allows a collector to directly review scanned images of the patient. It maintains a log of pregnancy tests done in a year, and helps track down cases of female foeticide. It was introduced on a trial basis in Kolhapur.

However, after a series of objections was levelled against the scheme, the matter was referred to the Bombay High Court and the state had appointed a committee under Dr P P Doke to review the feasibility of the project.

The committee had found that the system was not cost effective and. The panel members said it needed more time to assess the impact of fitting such a device to check illegal sex selection.

A report to the effect had been submitted to the state government. However, the state has not yet passed a resolution to recommend the use of active tracker.

Meenal Sarawade, chairperson, PMC’s women and child welfare committee, said they had unanimously approved a proposal to install the device in Pune. “The project is being implemented in Kolhapur. The tracker should be initially fitted in corporation-run hospitals,” Sarawade said.

When contacted, Dr Kishore Pakhare, assistant health officer, PMC in-charge of the Pre Conception and Pre Natal Diagnostic Techniques Act, told Newsline that they had asked the state health authorities for a status update.

The committee’s recommendation will be taken up by the standing committee of the PMC and only after it is okayed, the proposal will be sent to the general body, Dr S T Pardeshi, acting chief medical officer of health, PMC, said.

Bombay HC stays gazette notification

Dr Asaram Khade, Maharashtra nodal officer in-charge of the state PC-PNDT cell, said that the Mumbai HC had stayed the gazette notification issued by the Government of India on June 4 that had restricted radiologists from visiting more than two clinics within a district to perform ultrasound. The stay is valid till September 3 when the next hearing will take place, Khade said. The Indian Radiological and Imaging Association (IRIA) had said as pregnancy ultrasound comprises only about 2-5 per cent of all ultrasounds performed by radiologists, the notification would unfairly impact other tests too. In an order issued on July 26, the Delhi HC had also issued a stay on the gazette notification issued on June 4.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 31 July 2012 10:40
 

A garbage treatment initiative by residents

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The Hindu   31.07.2012

A garbage treatment initiative by residents

Mithosh Joseph 

Kerala Sanitation Mission to provide technical support

Collective action:Members of various residents’ associations at West Hill attend a training programme on waste disposal in Kozhikode recently.— PHOTO: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT
 
Collective action:Members of various residents’ associations at West Hill attend a training programme on waste disposal in Kozhikode recently.— PHOTO: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

 

In a boost to the anti-litter campaign of the City Corporation, over 1,200 households coming under 12 residents’ associations in and around West Hill here have drawn up a plan to set up their own biodegradable-waste-treatment units.

The Kerala Sanitation Mission will team up with the members of these residents’ associations and extend technical support to them.

“Our initiative is to prove that the garbage menace can largely be tackled through individual initiatives. Instead of blaming the authorities, we are trying to do our best for source-level waste reduction,” M.P. Kesavan Nambeesan, coordinator of the project, said.

He said the members of the residents’ associations had agreed to cooperate with the initiative and would submit a special form mentioning the type of plant they wanted to set up in their houses.

The discussions held with the sanitation mission show that preference will be given to the setting up of domestic vermicomposting units and biogas plants. In addition to individual units, common biogas plants for collective use will also be encouraged.

The coordination committee has sought the support of a government-approved service provider to take up the project.

The residents will finalise a suitable treatment method within a month and communicate it to the agency assigned. Government subsidy too will be available to the residents with the sanitation mission agreeing to clear the formalities.

“We are confident that the initiative will be a success as most residents’ association members have promised their cooperation,” Mr. Nambeesan said.

He said the members had received training from experts in the field on aspects such as the various options available and how to use them, and this would help to accomplish the project.

Along with the waste treatment initiative, the coordination committee plans to tie up with a Bangalore-based agency to scientifically treat electronic waste.If the agreement is realised, people in the area will be able to store e-waste in a common location and hand over it to the agency for treatment.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 31 July 2012 06:41
 

HDMC to crack down on pig, dog menace

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The Hindu                   31.07.2012

HDMC to crack down on pig, dog menace

Staff Correspondent

 Action plan to be prepared and executed within a month

Hubli-Dharwad Municipal Corporation (HDMC) Commissioner Y.S. Patil has said that an action plan to free the city from the menace of stray pigs and dogs will be executed in a month.

The general body meeting on Monday unanimously passed a resolution empowering the HDMC to take steps to address the problem.

Raising the issue, Congress members Ganesh Tagaragunti and Deepak Chinchore criticised officials for “failing” to tackle the menace despite spending large sums. It was time for the HDMC to decide if human life was more important than the animals, they said.BJP members Lakshman Savadi and Shivanand Muttannavar supported them.

Legal issues

Mr. Chinchore pointed out the health concerns arising from the large number of stray pigs and demanded action against health officer Prabhu Biradar for dereliction of duty.

Mr. Biradar explained that the law did not allow them to kill animals, and so, the only option was to move them outside the city. This had been opposed by residents living on the outskirts as well as those who depended on the pigs for their livelihood.

Staff had been threatened while catching and releasing pigs, he said. Besides, organisations that came forward to shift the pigs quoted Rs. 800 to Rs. 1,000 per pig to do so.

The HDMC legal cell too said that the law prohibited the killing of animals, except when they were diseased. They advised that any action plan be prepared in consultation with the Advocate-General.

  • Officials criticised for failing to address the problem
  • Several hurdles in shifting pigs out of the city: health officer
 


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