Tackling Thalassemia- The story of Cyprus

Submitted by arpitv007 on

Today I came to know of a parent who virtually killed their own child due to the harassment faced at the hands of hospital staff. Their child was a Thalassemia major, AB-ve. After suffering from heavy medical expenses, negligence and rash behavior from staff, frustration and helplessness, they decided to stop bringing their child for regular transfusions. The child died in 3 months. This came as a shock for me. A slap on all those faces who may want to believe they are working in the field of transfusion medicine.

Long Live Wisdom!

Submitted by souravroy on

"To provide the most educative and enlightening material. To promote right thinking and Living among people. To strengthen the moral fibre of the society. To help acquire and sustain knowledge, succes

Sailen Manna: He Played The Game With A Difference

Submitted by aurora on

We see and hear of leaders everywhere. Perhaps being a leader in sport is even more challenging because when you play the game, you are always in the spotlight, your every decision as a leader is debated and discussed and before you even know the whole world would have termed you as a successful one or a failure. Whether all that analysis is right or wrong is a different thing to debate upon, perhaps the greatest certificate that you get as a leader, specially in sport is from your own teammates (including coaches, back room staff etc).