Saturday, June 23, 2012

NACO Releases State Fact-Sheet and Estimation Report

 





Download the Full Text of the State Factsheet at http://bit.ly/NACO-State-Facts

Download the Full Text of the Technical HIV Estimation Report at http://bit.ly/NACO-Estimation-2010



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Suicide and Development Indicators - How Tamil Nadu and Kerala Lead in Both

 
Note: This news item reports a paradox - “While in most parts of the world suicide tends to occur more frequently in groups at “social disadvantage,” such as lower income or employment levels, the highest rates in India are found in Tamil Nadu and Kerala, the two states with the highest development indicators.”

Suicide among India’s young adults at ‘crisis’ levels


STEPHANIE NOLEN
NEW DELHI — The Globe and Mail

Suicide is a leading cause of death in India, and occurs most frequently among educated young adults in the most rapidly developing parts of the country, according to new research published in the medical journal The Lancet.

“Suicide in young people is nothing short of a national crisis,” said Vikram Patel of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, lead author of the study. “Suicide will soon overtake maternal causes as the leading cause of death in young women, which is staggering.”

That has important implications for government policy, he said, adding that if India is looking to address avoidable causes of death, a greater focus should be put on suicide.

Using data drawn from a cause-of-death survey carried out by the Registrar General of India in 1.1 million homes, the researchers concluded that some 3 per cent of deaths in people 15 or older were from suicide, amounting to 187,000 suicide deaths in India in 2010. (In Canada, by comparison, suicide is the cause of 1.6 per cent of deaths). Forty per cent of men who committed suicide and 56 per cent of women were between 15 and 29 years old.

The study reveals a startling difference in the occurrence of suicide across the country: Rates in the south of India are 10 times higher than those in some northern states. While in most parts of the world suicide tends to occur more frequently in groups at “social disadvantage,” such as lower income or employment levels, the highest rates in India are found in Tamil Nadu and Kerala, the two states with the highest development indicators. The lowest is in Bihar, the state that finishes last in every measure of progress and development.

“Our study doesn’t answer why, and this is speculation, but it clearly points to something that is not biological. It has to point to the social environment young people are growing up in – there must be something toxic in the social environment in the rapidly developing states of India, which is not there in less developing states,” Dr. Patel said in an interview. “We don’t know what it is and we need to unpack it.”

He and his colleagues speculate that the cause of the higher suicide rates may lie in the gap between the rate at which society has changed versus that at which expectations have changed. “The most obvious explanation is that the distance you fall when you hit the ground of reality is greater when your aspirations have been built up by opportunities that in reality don’t exist, he said.

The study also noted that access to mental-health services, and open discussion about causes of suicide such as depression, are limited in India and have not been the focus of any public-health campaign in the way that other causes of death such as HIV/AIDS, which kill fewer people, have been.

Suicide remains a crime in India; the rates recorded in police crime statistics are much lower than those found in this study – because families report suicides as accidental deaths whenever possible. Police figures miss a quarter of male and a third of female suicides, these figures showed.

The method of suicide in nearly half of all cases in India is the ingestion of pesticides – a particularly lethal way of killing oneself that means fewer people survive attempts than they would elsewhere. But that also suggests an easy possible intervention in the restriction of pesticide sales, the researchers noted. Sri Lanka, for instance, has done this and cut its suicide rate.

Suicide rates are higher in rural India than in urban, likely because there is poorer access to care and a greater availability of pesticides, Dr. Patel said. But while the Indian media have focused considerable attention on suicide among farmers, the study found that agricultural workers were no more likely to commit suicide than rural people in other forms of employment.

The data show other intriguing differences in suicide in India compared to other countries. While in high-income countries men typically commit suicide three times more often than women, in India it’s just 1 1/2 times more often across all ages, and the rates are equal for men and women in the 15 to 29 age bracket.

“The age-standardized suicide rate in Indian women aged 15 years or older is more than 2 1/2 times greater than it is in women of the same age in high-income countries and nearly as high as it is in China,” which has the world’s highest rate, the study says.

Separated, widowed or divorced women are less likely to commit suicide in India, in contrast to the West where married women have a lower suicide rate than their single peers who are divorced, widowed or unmarried.


© Copyright 2012 The Globe and Mail Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Daya Trust's Scheme for HIV-affected Children

 
Scheme for HIV/AIDS affected children
Supreme Court judge K.S. Radhakrishnan will inaugurate the schemes being implemented by the Daya Charitable Trust for the HIV\AIDS affected children at the Town Hall Annex here on Friday.
M.B. Rajesh, MP, will preside over the function. Former High Court judge Chettur Sankaran Nair will be the chief guest at the function.

District panchayat president T.N. Khandamuthan, District Collector P.M. Ali Asgar Pasha, K.A. Chandran and K.K. Divakaran, former MLAs; P.A. Vasudevan, economist; municipal councillor Pramila Sasidharan, among others, are expected to take part.

Medical aid
The Trust is also helping mentally challenged people and providing medical aid to the poor, including the tribal people of Parambikulam, Nelliampathy and Attappady, said Trust chairman P. Sanjumon.

Copyright © 2012, The Hindu
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Monday, June 4, 2012

'Lifebus' Inaugurated

 
Life Bus campaign inaugurated

Tuesday, 22 May 2012
LIFE Bus campaign was inaugurated yesterday in front of corporation office at 10am. Mayor IP Paul inaugurated the function and MLA Adv Therambil Ramakrishnan presided over. District panchayat president KV Dasan spoke on the occasion.

Life Bus campaign is the continuation of "Red Ribbon Express "and it travels to every village. The main aim of this programme is to create awareness among people about HIV/AIDS through folk programmes. This programme will continue for seven days and there will be three shows performed every day at different places (total 21).

The programme is organised by district medical office with the help of Kerala State AIDS Control Society. Deputy DMO G Nandini welcomed the gathering and Deputy DMO S Sreedevi proposed vote of thanks. Street play named Rakshakan was performed by Manoranjan Arts, Kozhikode.



Rakshakan, a street play performed by Manoranjan Arts, Kozhikode as a part of the Aids awareness programme organised by district medical office in association with KSACS.





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Walk-in-Interview at KSACS (Deputation)

 
For Complete information, please download the circular from http://www.ksacs.in/documents/walk-in-interview-KSAS.pdf
For Complete information, please download the circular from http://www.ksacs.in/documents/walk-in-interview-KSAS.pdf

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Gay Rights Activist's Murder (The Hindu, 17 May 2012)

 
Tangasseri murder case : four arrested
3 of them directly involved in the murder
STAFF REPORTER | The HINDU | KOLLAM, May 17, 2012
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-kerala/article3427593.ece

The mystery behind the brutal murder of 39-year-old gay rights activist S. Anil on the night of May 9 at Tangasseri in the city has been solved by the Kollam police.

A team led by Assistant Commissioner of Police Thomson Jose arrested four persons in this connection on Wednesday.

The police said that three of them were directly involved in the murder. They were identified as Hyder Farooq, 21, native of Mayyanad, Priyan Mani, 23, and Vishnu Chandrababu, 20, both residing in Kollam city. The fourth person N. Nahas, 21, was arrested because he was in possession of a laptop the three had allegedly stolen from Anil's house.

The police said that Anil and Farooq was a homosexual pair. Of late, Farooq got information that Anil was HIV infected and this had disturbed Farooq a lot. He then went on to conclude that he too had contracted HIV infection from Anil and it generated revenge in him. The police said that Farooq decided to take revenge by killing Anil. Farooq sought the help of his friend, Priyan, who is allegedly involved in a number of theft cases, and Vishnu, who is an accomplice of the latter. Because Anil did not entertain unknown persons, two days before the murder, Farooq introduced the two to Anil at the Kollam KSRTC bus stand.

On the fatal night, the three went to Anil's quarters and after allegedly watching pornographic video, the four decided to have some intimate private session which Anil did not doubt. Taking advantage of the situation, Farooq allegedly slit Anil's neck with a knife while the other two held him tight. To confirm that he was dead, Anil was also stabbed in the abdomen. The three then smeared the body with chilli powder from Anil's kitchen. They then took away some of the valuables from the house which included the laptop, mobile phone, camera, and cash.

The knife used for killing Anil was recovered by the police from a pond at Umayanallur. The laptop was recovered from Nahas' mobile phone shop at Kadappakada. The four were produced before a magistrate court here on Wednesday evening and remanded to the District Jail for 14 days. The police team which cracked the case included circle inspector V. Sugathan and sub-inspectors Faroz, Vinod and Jayakrishnan. Anil worked as a watchman-cum-toll collector at the Shakthikulangara Fishing Harbour.


Copyright © 2012, The Hindu
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