Sunday, 21 August 2011

Dr. Subhash Mukherjee - My respect to a genius who suffered


Robert Edwards of Britain won the 2010 Nobel Prize in medicine for the development of in-vitro fertilization, a ground-breaking process that has helped many couples over the last two decades have children.
While Edwards was working towards his dream - creating the world’s first in vitro fertilized or test tube baby - a physician in India was working on the same subject but the odds were piled heavily against him.
Bengali doctor Subhash Mukhopadhyay was two months late in announcing the birth of Durga or Kanupriya Agarwal - India’s first test tube baby created by him on October 3, 1978.



While Edwards, professor emeritus at University of Cambridge, was lauded for his efforts, Mukhopadhyay was fighting a hostile state government that rubbished his findings. Ridiculed and ostracised, Mukhopadhyay was also not allowed to publicise his work in the international arena.
He was invited by the Kyoto University in 1979 to present his findings during a seminar in Japan but denied a passport by the Indian government. The depressed physician committed suicide in 1981.
Here are some facts about the man considered the father of India’s IVF research, who remained unsung during his lifetime but inspired many physicians after his death to bring his life and work to the public domain.
So who was Dr. Subhash Mukhopadhyay?
Born on January 16, 1931 in Bihar, Mukhopadhyay studied medicine at the prestigious National Medical College in Kolkata. He received his doctorate from Calcutta University in reproductive physiology in 1958. He obtained a second doctorate from Edinburgh in reproductive endocrinology.
He was noted for his work on ovarian stimulation - he used the protocol successfully on Durga’s mother even before any scientist in the world had resorted to the method.
He was also successful in his methodology of cryopreservation of a eight cell embryo.
However, the news of the birth of Durga, the world’s second test tube baby, was met with disdain and skepticism by his peers.
The only evidence of his work was a report he had prepared for the West Bengal government facing an enquiry. He was questioned by a government committee several times and his work was discredited as “bogus”.
What went against Dr. Mukhopadhyay then was the fact that no physiological or biochemical technique could distinguish between in vivo and in vitro fertilised babies.
He was transferred to the ophthalmology department of Calcutta Medical College in 1981 and prevented from completing his work on IVF. He was suffering from a major heart problem at that time, but he was made to climb by stairs to the ophthalmology department. (Its painful that the govt. of that time was so insane to post a person having degrees in reproductive physiology to the ophthalmology department.)
Mukhopadhyay had no documented evidence and the credit for bringing his work to the public domain is largely given to Dr. T C Anand Kumar who was recognized officially as the first to deliver a test tube baby in 1986.
Kumar went through Mukhopadhyay’s notes and credited the doctor posthumously for his pioneering work.
Medical scientists opine that had Mukhopadhyay been allowed to publish his work and given adequate government funds and infrastructure to complete his research, he would have been recognized as the pioneer in in vitro fertilization process, hopefully paving the way for a Nobel prize in medicine such as his precursor Edwards.
The Indian Council of Medical Research in 2005 acknowledged Mukhopadhyay as the creator of India’s first test tube baby.
Filmmaker Tapan Sinha, who was deeply impressed by Mukhopadhyay’s work, based his award-winning film ‘Ek Doctor Ki Maut’ on him.

If this is the state of research in our country, then its good that people drain from here to the west.....

Sunday, 14 August 2011

Free Online Medical Books

Hello!
Online medical books are a point of discussion now a days as they provide an easy access to resources. There are plenty of websites offering medical books to be downloaded online but somewhere hidden in those sites are the cost and monetory factors. You google "Free online medical books download"  and boom...there are a list of websites. you go on to the first one, there is a smile in your face as you can see all the books listed there, which you need. Automatically you move your mouse and click on one at the top, and at the very moment it shows you that, certain dollars are required to carry you to the next step, which is the actual download page. You keep on searching but the results are same. 

I myself suffered from these harassment while i was desperately searching for a radiology book to get hold of few CT scan theory before my medicine practical exam. So, thought of sharing a link with you all where these medical books will be found genuinely free.


This site has a whole lot of collection of the medical books covering almost all the subjects of undergraduate medical and surgical fields as well as specialized fields. A short description of each and every book with some related books are given in the website. There is a filesonic link below the description, which is the actual download link.
Now, Filesonic is a different entity all together. It is a place to upload files and it has two types of download options. 1. Fast Download 2. Slow Download. 

If you want the book for free, please click on the slow download button. It will make you wait for 30 seconds after which you need to enter a CAPTCHA. After successfully entering it, there will be a download link stating "START DOWNLOAD NOW". Click on it, and the bingo...the download starts.

Most of you must be thinking by now, what about the download speed as we chose SLOW DOWNLOAD?

Answer is, its just not a  problem...If you have a broadband connection, the speed is quite good and the file downloads within 30 minutes, depending of course on the size of the file.

So, enjoy with the books on your computer, take it anywhere with you on your laptop and Happy Reading!

Arnab Naha