International Research journal of Management Science and Technology
ISSN 2250 - 1959 (online) ISSN 2348 - 9367 (Print) New DOI : 10.32804/IRJMST
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THE STUDY ON THE ACCESSIBILITY AND ACCEPTABILITY OF GENERIC MEDICINES AMONG THE URBAN SLUM POPULATION OF DELHI
1 Author(s): MS. RAJAT ARORA
Vol - 6, Issue- 9 , Page(s) : 30 - 38 (2015 ) DOI : https://doi.org/10.32804/IRJMST
HEALTHCARE IN INDIA The Indian constitution charges the states with "the raising of the level of nutrition and the standard of living of its people and the improvement of public health" ( The Constitutional Framework, Ch. 8). However, many critics of India's National Health Policy, endorsed by Parliament in 1983, point out that the policy lacks specific measures to achieve broad stated goals. Particular problems include the failure to integrate health services with wider economic and social development, the lack of nutritional support and sanitation, and the poor participatory involvement at the local level. Health care facilities and personnel increased substantially between the early 1950s and early 1980s, but because of fast population growth, the number of licensed medical practitioners per 10,000 individuals had fallen by the late 1980s to three per 10,000 from the 1981 level of four per 10,000. In 1991 there were approximately ten hospital beds per 10,000 individuals.