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1989| October-December | Volume 33 | Issue 4
Online since
September 29, 2010
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Medico-social profile of male teenager STD patients attending a clinic in Pune.
AC Urmil, PK Dutta, KK Sharma, SS Ganguly
October-December 1989, 33(4):176-82
PMID
:2486984
A study of 250 male teenager STD cases was carried out to determine the association between certain medicosocial factors e.g. age, type of infection, educational status, source of infection, knowledge about mode of acquiring infection and prophylaxis etc. Salient findings of the study such as gonorrhoea being the commonest type of STD, curiosity being the main reason for first sexual exposure and prostitutes being the major source of infection have been highlighted in this communication.
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571
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Intranatal practices in rural Rajasthan.
V Pendse, I Giri
October-December 1989, 33(4):198-9
PMID
:2486990
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[CITATIONS]
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273
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Health economics.
SP Mukhopadhyay
October-December 1989, 33(4):163-4
PMID
:2486982
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240
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Mild-moderate Kwashiorkor-Marasmus syndrome : anthropometric and biochemical observations.
PS Chattopadhyay, AK Bhattacharya
October-December 1989, 33(4):165-9
PMID
:2518626
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391
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A study of social health and physical function of government retirees in Delhi.
DK Taneja, AS Nalwa
October-December 1989, 33(4):170-5
PMID
:2486983
Education and income-wise retirees were better than an average Indian. However they had still to fulfil certain financial obligations involving heavy expenditures. Family setting continued to play important part in their daily lives. Their perceived level of utility towards society (95.32%) was high and drug habits were not a problem. Functionally majority had productive capacity. As a strategy to keep dependent population at low levels, it was very much possible to utilise their services as not only they were functionally capable but they were also educated and had work experience. The existing family set up should be encouraged and maintained by all possible means and trends seen in developed countries prevented so as to keep our elderly socially, psychologically and emotionally healthy. This will reduce the need for geriatric institutions.
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584
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A study of oro-dental disorder in the area of Rural Health Training Centre, Naila (Jaipur).
DC Jain
October-December 1989, 33(4):183-8
PMID
:2486985
A door to door survey on oro-dental disorders was carried out in four villages of the field practice area of Rural Health Training Centre, Naila (Jaipur), covering a population of 1384 in the age group of 6 years and above. A total of 81 (5.85 per cent) of the examined population had malocclusion, and its relationship with age was found to be significant (P less than 0.01). A highly significant (P less than 0.001) increase was observed in oral-mucosal and dental disorder with advance in age. Among the dental disorders, dental caries was most common, affecting 15.32 per cent of the total population followed by fluorosis (1.66 per cent), attrition of teeth (0.94) per cent) and supernumerary (0.58 per cent). A statistically highly significant (p less than 0.001) difference was observed in prevalence of attrition, dental fluorosis and caries with age. The facts accumulated during the survey bring out vividly the need to apply the growing knowledge on orodental health. The need is not only for treatment, but also prevention and education about oral hygiene.
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607
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Present status of susceptibility of Anopheles annularis to different insecticides.
KK Ghosh, AK Hati
October-December 1989, 33(4):189-91
PMID
:2486986
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300
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Morbidity pattern in aged persons attending Rural Health Centre in Haryana.
U Kapil, AK Sood
October-December 1989, 33(4):192-192
PMID
:2486987
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275
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A bacteriological study of cholera in Gulbarga district.
RC Kanta, RM Gangane
October-December 1989, 33(4):193-4
PMID
:2486988
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278
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Impact of health education and preventive child health programme.
SP Mukhopadhyay
October-December 1989, 33(4):195-7
PMID
:2486989
Indices of child health status were compared for 2 British areas with similar population structure but different history of health education. Croydon in the south has had a health education unit since 1958, and has 5 times the health education expenditures currently. In contrast St. Helens began its health education services in 1975. Expenditures per capita average 9.6 P in Croydon, va 2.0 P in St. Helens (1974). The health status indices reported by the 2 areas were: live birth rate 12.9 in Croydon, va. 14.7 for St. Helens;, nervous system birth defects 3.9 vs 8.3; congenital birth defect rate 32.7 vs 33.8; stillbirth rate 10.5 vs. 13.2; low birth weight 65.9 vs. 71.2; infant mortality rate 16.2 vs. 21.3; polio and DPT immunization 80% vs. 40%.
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© Indian Journal of Public Health | Published by Wolters Kluwer -
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Online since 25
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September, 2010