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23 October 2000 Issue




COVER
  Sold On Sale
Discounts, freebies, lotteries and loans. Riding on the festival season, companies are using every conceivable marketing trick to lure consumers

 
THE NATION
 

Brothers In Arms
Though the CBI chargesheet against the Hindujas is silent on where the kickbacks ended up, it is still an important landmark in the 13-year chase

 
MUSIC
 

Hounds Of Music
With Visvabharati’s copyright on Tagore ending next year and the Centre refusing to throw in its weight, the poet’s music may be finally unshackled

 
Columns
 

Fifth Column
by Tavleen Singh
And Justice For All

 
 

Kautilya
by Jairam Ramesh
New Light On Power

 
Other stories
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  Neighbours  
  Education  
  The Arts  
  The Nation  
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  Music  
NewsNotes
 

Beating Retreat

 
 

Buffer Zone

More...

 
   

Care Today:
Fight the Drought
 
 



 
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HEALTH WATCH

Taking a Shot Cut

Immunisation against four diseases, including hepatitis B, at a single go

High in the list of horrors for new parents today is the dreaded jaundice-causing virus, hepatitis B. Without mercy, this killer virus preys on one in 20 Indians, most of them babies less than a year old. In spite of the obvious danger, hepatitis B is currently not a part of the National Immunisation Programme. Most children only get shots of the DPT (diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus) vaccine. Now all that may change. A new four-in-one vaccine, Tritantrix HB, developed by the pharmaceutical company SmithKline Beecham not only protects the child against diphtheria, pertussis and tetanus, but also against hepatitis B-in a single sweep.

When Pfizer India and Shanta Biotech launched Shanvac B, the first Indian DNA-based hepatitis B vaccine, earlier this year and other companies followed suit, the fight against hepatitis B got a new edge. It was time to destroy the virus-it reigned supreme through the 1990s, feasting on and destroying livers, frequently leading to liver cancer among survivors of its attack. Often silent in its devastation, hepatitis B sometimes signals its presence with symptoms like tiredness, mild fever, yellow skin and eyes, along with dark urine and pale faeces. "Hepatitis B is even deadlier than aids," warns Dr Dinesh Pal, joint director of the National Institute of Public Cooperation and Child Development.

Like HIV, hepatitis B sneaks into its victims through blood and body fluids, so infants born to hepatitis B infected mothers are at a particularly great risk. Currently the only way to protect the child is to administer a single, anti-hepatitis B vaccine a month after birth and again five months later. This is in addition to the DPT vaccine series to be taken at six, 10 and 14 weeks. The growing child's initial months are marked by a deluge of painful shots for a variety of vaccines-polio, measles, mmr... the weary list continues.

At Rs 120, Tritrantrix HB is not a big price to pay for a vaccine that kills four birds with one stone. Explains pediatrician Dr P.N. Dubey of Apollo Hospital, "It means one less prick for the infant, one less visit for the mother." While the DPT vaccine is currently a very affordable Rs 8 per shot, a single hepatitis B vaccines costs 20 times more. In the final analysis, the lower cost could hold the key to the widespread success of the quadruple vaccine-and to the nation's future health.

-Supriya Bezbaruah

IN SMALL DOSES
  Miracle Fruit: Apples, according to Indian scientists, are a nutritional treasure chest. Apple skins help ward off cancer through a unique mix of molecules called flavinoids and polyphenols. Studies show that apples check proliferation of most liver and colon-cancer cells. The fruit supplies a range of nutrients such as iron, copper, vitamin C and calcium. Eating an apple is a more efficient way of cleaning teeth than a toothbrush. It even plays a role in preventing heart disease. Besides, malic acid present in the fruit prevents diseases like rheumatism and arthritis. Sounds like a miracle posing as a fruit.

Tomatoes Fight Trouble: Red is a reassuring sign, at least in vegetables, according to Canada-based Indian nutritionists. Lycopene, the molecule that splashes tomato red, protects the human body from the ravages of cancer and cardiovascular diseases. Such chronic diseases are often caused because rogue oxygen atoms bombard parts of cells. Lycopene is particularly adept at trapping these atoms. Eating over 10 tomatoes per week has been shown to reduce the risk of prostate cancer by 35 per cent and was also effective in preventing cholesterol. Yet another reason to eat more salad.


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     METRO TODAY
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A Fancy For Words
"I don't think I could be called a poet," insists Feroze Gandhi with a shy smile.
more...

Looking Glass

Chennai: Mall


Calcutta: Home Library

Pune: Hotel

Delhi: Restaurant

Delhi: Play

 
    Web Exclusives
COLUMNS  



Relics of old empires exist everywhere. Why can't the Mani Shankar Aiyars of India let them be? asks INDIA TODAY Senior Editor Ravi Shankar in Friday Fundas.

 
DESPATCHES  


The fate of the Kannur project in power-strapped Kerala is in a state of limbo as the Government contends it is too expensive. But is it? INDIA TODAY Principal Correspondent M.G. Radhakrishnan investigates in
Despatches.

 
XTRAS!

Full coverages
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» 1971: The Untold Story
» Veerappan Strikes Again
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