Evolution of The Right to Health in India Vis-A-Vis Bioinformatics and Medical Infrastructure in Bengaluru District
-
Published:2024-02-20
Issue:1
Volume:18
Page:e04915
-
ISSN:1981-982X
-
Container-title:Revista de Gestão Social e Ambiental
-
language:
-
Short-container-title:RGSA
Author:
Gurugopinath RajivORCID, Venugopal BangaruORCID
Abstract
Objective: This research aims to identify the study of Right to Health and Development in India especially through the existing framework of Law specifically related to bioinformatics and medical infrastructure laws in India.
Methodology: Exploratory and Analytical research is employed in this work using Primary and secondary data from Legislations, Journals, Books, Articles, and reports and also a data set from empirically sourced data.
Result: The survey indicated that the Urban Primary Healthcare Centres (UPHC’s) find it difficult to address the Gender Disparities in Health Access, Age-Related Health Service Utilization, Effectiveness of Bioinformatics in Health Management, Impact of Medical Infrastructure on Health Outcomes, Regional Disparities in Health Access, Community Engagement and Health Services, Bioinformatics Adoption and Staff Capacity.
Conclusion: Right to health, bioinformatics and medical infrastructure in themselves are a very broad subject matter. The concept of Right to Health aimed at Development in the advent of advances in the technology, the study of medicine and the modes of experimentation, has changed drastically and the approach in respect to the findings involved in these studies have radically changed. Therefore, invariably this has to be dealt with constitutionally as Right to Health is an implied right that has taken birth from the fundamental right of Life and Liberty as envisioned under the Article 21 of the Indian Constitution and the same has to be looked into from a detailed perspective in relation to the medical infrastructure and preservation of the biological samples and subsequent updating in terms of databases. Ultimately the services offered in the UPHC’s by the state should be on par with, if not ahead, of the Private Health Care Centres in order for the concept of Right to Health to be fully realised and the UPHC’s should ensure work, clinical consideration, training, retirement aide, medical care, education and social security of the Doctors and staff at in the UPHC’s.
Publisher
RGSA- Revista de Gestao Social e Ambiental
Reference48 articles.
1. Backman, G., Hunt, P. H., Khosla, R., Jaramillo-Strouss, C., Fikre, B. M., Rumble, C., Pevalin, D. J., Páez, D., Pineda, M., Frisancho, A., Tarco, D., Motlagh, M. M., Farcasanu, D., & Vladescu, C. (2008). Health systems and the right to health: an assessment of 194 countries. The Lancet, 372(9655), 2047–2085. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(08)61781-x 2. Balistri, E., Casellato, F., Giannelli, C., & Stefanelli, C. (2021). Block Health: Blockchain-based secure and peer-to-peer health information sharing with data protection and right to be forgotten. ICT Express, 7(3), 308–315. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icte.2021.08.006 3. Bartels, S. A., & Wisner, S. C. (2022). Haiti’s right to remedy and health-an urgent call to action. The Lancet Regional Health - Americas, 10, 100236. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lana.2022.100236 4. Biehl, J., Petryna, A., Gertner, A., Amon, J.J., Picon, P.D., 2009. Judicialisation of the right to health in Brazil. The Lancet 373, 2182–2184. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(09)61172-7 5. Chen, A.H., Youdelman, M.K. & Brooks, J. The Legal Framework for Language Access in Healthcare Settings: Title VI and Beyond. J GEN INTERN MED 22 (Suppl 2), 362–367 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-007-0366-2
|
|