Ramila Bisht
Jawaharlal Nehru University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ramila Bisht.
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth | 2014
Susan F Murray; Benjamin M. Hunter; Ramila Bisht; Tim Ensor; Debra Bick
BackgroundDemand-side financing, where funds for specific services are channelled through, or to, prospective users, is now employed in health and education sectors in many low- and middle-income countries. This systematic review aimed to critically examine the evidence on application of this approach to promote maternal health in these settings. Five modes were considered: unconditional cash transfers, conditional cash transfers, short-term payments to offset costs of accessing maternity services, vouchers for maternity services, and vouchers for merit goods. We sought to assess the effects of these interventions on utilisation of maternity services and on maternal health outcomes and infant health, the situation of underprivileged women and the healthcare system.MethodsThe protocol aimed for collection and synthesis of a broad range of evidence from quantitative, qualitative and economic studies. Nineteen health and social policy databases, seven unpublished research databases and 27 websites were searched; with additional searches of Indian journals and websites. Studies were included if they examined demand-side financing interventions to increase consumption of services or goods intended to impact on maternal health, and met relevant quality criteria. Quality assessment, data extraction and analysis used Joanna Briggs Institute standardised tools and software. Outcomes of interest included maternal and infant mortality and morbidity, service utilisation, factors required for successful implementation, recipient and provider experiences, ethical issues, and cost-effectiveness. Findings on Effectiveness, Feasibility, Appropriateness and Meaningfulness were presented by narrative synthesis.ResultsThirty-three quantitative studies, 46 qualitative studies, and four economic studies from 17 countries met the inclusion criteria. Evidence on unconditional cash transfers was scanty. Other demand-side financing modes were found to increase utilisation of maternal healthcare in the index pregnancy or uptake of related merit goods. Evidence of effects on maternal and infant mortality and morbidity outcomes was insufficient. Important implementation aspects include targeting and eligibility criteria, monitoring, respectful treatment of beneficiaries, suitable incentives for providers, quality of care and affordable referral systems.ConclusionsDemand-side financing schemes can increase utilisation of maternity services, but attention must be paid to supply-side conditions, the fine-grain of implementation and sustainability. Comparative studies and research on health impact and cost-effectiveness are required.
Globalization and Health | 2012
Ramila Bisht; Emma Pitchforth; Susan F Murray
National and transnational health care systems are rapidly evolving with current processes of globalisation. What is the contribution of the social sciences to an understanding of this field? A structured scoping exercise was conducted to identify relevant literature using the lens of India – a ‘rising power’ with a rapidly expanding healthcare economy. A five step search and analysis method was employed in order to capture as wide a range of material as possible. Documents published in English that met criteria for a social science contribution were included for review. Via electronic bibliographic databases, websites and hand searches conducted in India, 113 relevant articles, books and reports were identified. These were classified according to topic area, publication date, disciplinary perspective, genre, and theoretical and methodological approaches. Topic areas were identified initially through an inductive approach, then rationalised into seven broad themes. Transnational consumption of health services; the transnational healthcare workforce; the production, consumption and trade in specific health-related commodities, and transnational diffusion of ideas and knowledge have all received attention from social scientists in work related to India. Other themes with smaller volumes of work include new global health governance issues and structures; transnational delivery of health services and the transnational movement of capital. Thirteen disciplines were found represented in our review, with social policy being a clear leader, followed by economics and management studies. Overall this survey of India-related work suggests a young and expanding literature, although hampered by inadequacies in global comparative data, and by difficulties in accessing commercially sensitive information. The field would benefit from further cross-fertilisation between disciplines and greater application of explanatory theory. Literatures around stem cell research and health related commodities provide some excellent examples of illuminating social science. Future research agendas on health systems issues need to include innovative empirical work that captures the dynamics of transnational processes and that links macro-level change to fine-grained observations of social life.
International Journal of Evidence-based Healthcare | 2012
Susan F Murray; Benjamin M Hunter; Ramila Bisht; Tim Ensor; Debra Bick
The overall objective is to assess the effects of demand-side financing (DSF) interventions on maternal health service utilisation and on maternal health outcomes in lowand middleincome countries. Broader effects on perinatal and infant health, the situation of underprivileged women and the health care system will also be assessed. For example, we will examine evidence on the appropriateness and meaningfulness of DSF for meeting the needs of rural, poor or socially excluded women, and evidence on the feasibility and appropriateness of DSF in terms of quality of care, sustainability and institutional capacity to run such schemes.
Indian Journal of Medical Ethics | 2012
Abhay Shukla; Anand Philip; Anand Zachariah; Anant Phadke; A Suneetha; Bhargavi Davar; Cehat; Chinu Srinivasan; Dhruv Mankad; Imrana Qadeer; Jayasree Kalathil; K. Lalita; K Sajaya; Ks Jacob; Kamayani Balimahabal; Manisha Gupte; Mohan Rao; Moosa Salie; Padma Prakash; P. Chatterjee; Rama Baru; Rama Melkote; Rajan Shukla; Rakhal Gaitonde; Ramila Bisht; Ravi Duggal; Renu Khanna; Ritu Priya; R Srivatsan; Sami Timimi
Fleischhacker WW; and the EUFEST Study Group. Sexual dysfunction in first-episode schizophrenia patients: results from European First Episode Schizophrenia Trial. J Clin Psychopharmacol 2011 Jun;31(3):274-80. 4. Juruena MR, de Sena EP, de Oliveira IR. Safety and tolerability of antipsychotics: focus on amisulpride. Drug Healthc Patient Saf 2010;2:20511. 5. Balon R. SSRI-associated sexual dysfunction. Am J Psychiatry 2006 Sep;163(9):1504-9. 6. Stahl SM. Essential psychopharmacology. The prescriber’s guide. 1 South Asian Edition. New Delhi: Cambridge University Press; 2007. 7. American Psychological Association. Answers to your questions: For a better understanding of sexual orientation and homosexuality [Internet]. Available from http://www.apa.org/helpcenter/sexual-orientation.aspx [cited 2012 Mar 21]. 8. Kalra G. A psychiatrist’s role in “coming out” process: Context and controversies post-377. Indian J Psychiatry 2012 Jan-Mar;54; 54(1):6972.
Globalization and Health | 2012
Susan F Murray; Ramila Bisht; Rama Baru; Emma Pitchforth
The complex relationship between globalization and health calls for research from many disciplinary and methodological perspectives. This editorial gives an overview of the content trajectory of the interdisciplinary journal ‘Globalization and Health’ over the first six years of production, 2005 to 2010. The findings show that bio-medical and population health perspectives have been dominant but that social science perspectives have become more evident in recent years. The types of paper published have also changed, with a growing proportion of empirical studies. A special issue on ‘Health systems, health economies and globalization: social science perspectives’ is introduced, a collection of contributions written from the vantage points of economics, political science, psychology, sociology, business studies, social policy and research policy. The papers concern a range of issues pertaining to the globalization of healthcare markets and governance and regulation issues. They highlight the important contribution that can be made by the social sciences to this field, and also the practical and methodological challenges implicit in the study of globalization and health.
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | 2017
Linda Waldman; Ramila Bisht; Rajashree Saharia; Abhinav Kapoor; Bushra Rizvi; Yasir Hamid; Meghana Arora; Ima Chopra; Kumud T Sawansi; Ritu Priya; Fiona Marshall
This paper examines the intersection between environmental pollution and people’s acknowledgements of, and responses to, health issues in Karhera, a former agricultural village situated between the rapidly expanding cities of New Delhi (India’s capital) and Ghaziabad (an industrial district in Uttar Pradesh). A relational place-based view is integrated with an interpretive approach, highlighting the significance of place, people’s emic experiences, and the creation of meaning through social interactions. Research included surveying 1788 households, in-depth interviews, participatory mapping exercises, and a review of media articles on environment, pollution, and health. Karhera experiences both domestic pollution, through the use of domestic waste water, or gandapani, for vegetable irrigation, and industrial pollution through factories’ emissions into both the air and water. The paper shows that there is no uniform articulation of any environment/health threats associated with gandapani. Some people take preventative actions to avoid exposure while others do not acknowledge health implications. By contrast, industrial pollution is widely noted and frequently commented upon, but little collective action addresses this. The paper explores how the characteristics of Karhera, its heterogeneous population, diverse forms of environmental pollution, and broader governance processes, limit the potential for citizen action against pollution.
Economic and Political Weekly | 2014
Benjamin M. Hunter; Ramila Bisht; Indira Chakravarthi; Susan F Murray
Economic and Political Weekly | 2010
Rajib Dasgupta; Ramila Bisht
Indian Journal of Public Health | 2013
Ramila Bisht
Archive | 2017
Ritu Priya; Ramila Bisht; Pritpal Randhawa; Meghana Arora; Jonathan Dolley; Gordon McGranahan; Fiona Marshall