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Heartless Investment

Windjammer

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A survey of 400 children under 12 suffering from congenital heart disease found only 44 per cent of girls were treated for their condition compared with 70 per cent of boys.
Doctors and women's rights campaigners said the figures reflected the same discrimination against girls throughout India, where women often abort pregnancies if they suspect the foetus is female. The sex ratio of girls to boys has declined sharply in India from 933 per thousand in 2001 to 914 in 2011.
In a study for the British Medical Journal, doctors at New Delhi's All-India Institute of Medical Sciences, said they were alarmed at the gender anomalies in treatment they discovered.
"We found that significant gender bias exists in the acceptance of heart surgery among children. Of the 405 patients studied, 44 per cent (59/134) of girls had undergone surgery at 1 year compared with 70 per cent (189/271) of boys," said lead author, cardiologist Dr S Ramakrishnan.
Dr Amal Kumar Banerjee, cardiologist and former president of the Cardiologist Society of India, said Indian parents regard their sons as better investments for medical treatment.

"If the male child's abnormality is corrected in the early stage he will grow as a normal man and can earn for the family. But for girls, most parents think such corrective surgeries are not important, since they will be married off in their adulthood and become the responsibility of her husband," he said.

They fear any surgery will leave scars which will cause 'matrimonial problems' later. "Parents would not mind, if the girl dies due to such disease," he added.
"The bias is at every stage. First the parents kill her even before the girl is born. If she is allowed to live the girl gets less attention when it comes to primary health care, food, schooling, love and is always seen as a burden," said women's rights activist Flavia Agnes.

Indian girls being denied heart treatment by parents who prefer to spend on boys - Telegraph
 
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Sex selection of foetuses in India has led to 7.1 million fewer girls than boys up to age six, a gender gap that has widened by more than a million in a decade, according to a study published in The Lancet.

In Indian families in which the first child has been a girl, more and more parents with access to prenatal ultrasound testing are aborting a second female in the hope that a subsequent pregnancy will yield a boy, said the study.
The increasingly lopsided ratio of girls to boys is larger in wealthy households than poorer ones, the researchers reported.
Between 1980 and 2010, they estimate, four to 12 million girls were aborted because of their sex.
"Selective abortion of female foetuses, usually after a firstborn girl, has increased in India over the past few decades, and has contributed to a widening imbalance in the child sex ratio," they conclude.
The female shortfall for the zero-to-six age bracket was 6.0 million in 2001, and 4.2 million in 1991.

"Increases in selective abortion of girls are probably because of persistent son preference combined with decreases in fertility," the authors say.
The mean number of children per Indian woman fell from 3.8 in 1990 to 2.6 in 2008.
Selective abortion of female foetuses accounts for two to four per cent of female pregnancies in India, roughly 300,000 to 600,000 per year out of 13.3 to 13.7 million carrying a girl in 2010, the study found.

From 2001 to 2011, the practice increased at a rate of 170 per cent, slowing from 260 per cent over the previous decade.
In the study, researchers led by Prabhat Jha of the Centre for Global Health at the University of Toronto, analysed census data from 2011 and earlier.
The also examined over 250,000 births from national surveys to calculate the difference in the girl-boy ratio for second births in families in which the first-born child had been a girl.
They found that this ratio fell from 906 girls per 1,000 boys in 1990 to 836 girls per 1,000 boys in 2005, an annual decline of a half of a per cent.
Declines were much greater in mothers who had gone to school for at least ten years than in mothers with no education at all. The same trend held true for wealthier households compared to poorer ones.
If the first child was a boy, however, there was no drop in the girl-boy ratio for the second child, showing that families - especially those better off and more educated - are far more likely to abort girls if the firstborn is also female.

Millions of female foetuses aborted in India - Telegraph
 
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come on now people, the gender abuse is very rife in this part of the world, be it India or Pakistan. Get over it everyone. Strive to abolish it in your own country rather than blaming the other.

Yeah guys, don't gleefully post articles highlighting the "juicy" parts in eye-burning red. That's just sad.

(You too Karan jee :))
 
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windjamer please continue the wonderful job you are doing in informing us about our faults . :yahoo:
i am sure it will help you sleep better . allow us to be the cure for your insomnia.;)
 
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One would believe that this issue is not just rife in India. I think the sub continent statistics would be similar throughout all the nations. Sad fact of reality. The gift of life is a beautiful thing to give. To decide one sex is better than the other isnt exclusive in India. I am sure from the knowledge i have its the same in all our nations so lets please not gloat at these stats.
 
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Unfortunately this is true. As long as boy is considered the bread winner, boy takes care of parents in old age and there is dowry, not much will change.
 
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<FACEPALM>, where do you get these articles WJ?

Seems you are missing the link. ;)



windjamer please continue the wonderful job you are doing in informing us about our faults . :yahoo:
i am sure it will help you sleep better . allow us to be the cure for your insomnia.;)

Allow me to enlighten you, it's not something that I created or for that matter something that appeared in some blog . Telegraph is a highly respected Broadsheet paper, however, sadly for you, it doesn't give a cure for indigestion. :)
 
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i would like to congragulate WJ

its hard to find an article like this when the world and all media agencies are treating india liike a saint.

it must have taken a lot of dedication and obsession.

well done buddy
 
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i would like to congragulate WJ

its hard to find an article like this when the world and all media agencies are treating india liike a saint.

it must have taken a lot of dedication and obsession.

well done buddy

Damn.... I nearly spilt my coffee there dude...... what to say.....snow white eat your heart out. !!
As for crediting me with obsession....... some Indians here would be very offended indeed. !!
 
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Damn.... I nearly spilt my coffee there dude...... what to say.....snow white eat your heart out. !!
As for crediting me with obsession....... some Indians here would be very offended indeed. !!
Wow so much concern for India????
i would like to congragulate WJ

its hard to find an article like this when the world and all media agencies are treating india liike a saint.

it must have taken a lot of dedication and obsession.

well done buddy
Why dont U guys refer to article which says a two year pakistani kid was to come to India for open heart surgery?
Obsession with India will cover ur eyes thats for sure
 
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This Pakistani's heart will beat for India

Friday July 15, 2011 07:44:07 AM, IANS

Chennai: A Pakistani national has got a new lease of life after an Indian family donated the heart of their family member, who died in a road accident here, to him.
This Pakistani's heart will beat for India | ummid.com

http://www.defence.pk/forums/curren...doctors-gift-life-two-pakistani-children.html

http://www.defence.pk/forums/member...i-child-receives-gift-indian-doctors-eid.html

Indian doctor performs free heart surgery on Pakistani

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan

The Hindu : Tamil Nadu / Chennai News : Indian doctors cure Pakistani boy of congenital heart defect


the list is endless. :yahoo:


Make love no war
 
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