Research is a booming field in today’s India. A nation home to a billion beats and also the world’s largest democracy is beginning to spread its wings into the territory of research.
India faces issues that are Glocal, to be precise, both those set of issues which reflect the masses and the classes. But a question that stares back is whether; the research being done is of any use or is it just for the sake of addition and grandeur that adds to the CV?
The medical schools in India have begun to encourage research among young medical students. But given the kind of curriculum they are exposed to with unending changes in the policy reforms, research dies a natural death. The medical students don’t get much time exclusively devoted to research; the way the grants are selected by the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) has raised many eyebrows. Whether you label it as foolishness or bias or ignorance, we leave it up to you.
If you try to think too out of the box, then you will not get an ethical clearance for words best unsaid. Let us understand that it takes extraordinary range, versatility and scholarship to produce superior research. A thirst for knowledge and patience helps. How much of research is relevant in an Indian scenario? Do we need quality or quantity? With the Government of India planning to set up 187 new Medical colleges in North East India within a span of 10 years, the question that crops up is are we to have more college and produce more doctors or must we think of a compromising alternative where on the one hand we produce doctors and on the other hand also uplift the cause of research and its ideologies. The aspect that needs a thought process is whether research should be service related, training related, teaching related and the Public Health Foundation of India is trying to find an answer to it.
The steep growth of Indian economy over the past 20 years has not translated into better health Indices. The expected decline in infant mortality, malnutrition and maternal mortality has been far less than what we had possibly thought of.
An important reason is the poor public expenditure on health at about 1.2% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) which is among the lowest in the world. More than 40% of the population don’t have toilets in India, to what extent can corporate social responsibility help and how possibly can even High tech research prove useful is something that cannot be answered.
In a country that is so steeped in History and filled with mixture, the drawback in the education patterns looms large.
You are expected to do research, practice, teach and many more not leaving any space for excellence in the field you like the most. The realisation that focusing on one aspect by one individual can contribute in geometric quantum is something which has not dawned on the policy makers in the Ministry of Health on the whole.
Amidst this confusion in toto, most medical students and doctors do not have a personal life that is untouched by workplace concerns, which in turn affects the entire chain of events that go along in the making of a day.
Manipulation, fraudulent and misleading publications are found in our society too. It should not surprise us, because we have great instances of medical fraud by Mark Specter with Biochemist Effrain Racker of Cornell University of how they found a cure for cancer by manipulating the DNA by a virus. The discovery was so brilliant that it was strongly tipped for a Nobel Prize. But it was all faked and the bubble had to burst.
The involvement of pharmaceutical industries, in industry-sponsored and guided research is another growing concern which adds to the list of research, relevance and its true purpose.
Should you call it a weak attempt? Or should you flow with the tide? Only time can tell.
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