From TOI
Michael Moore's latest film Sicko is a scalding indictment of the American health care system which has been exploited by rapacious medical insurance companies and Big Pharma. You can't help feeling sick after watching the movie. Moore's account shows that the world's most advanced country is letting its corporations suck the life of its citizens.
Moore examines the system in Canada, France, Britain and Cuba, all of which have free, universal health care, to humiliate US political leadership, most of which he shows is in the pay of big corporations. But as far as Maggi Grace is concerned, Moore has missed out on one story closest to her heart.
Monday, July 16, 2007
The Indian Pharma Industry is Estimated to Be Worth USD4.5 Billion, Growing at about Eight to Nine Percent Annually
From Digital50
July 12, 2007 - Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c62410) has announced the addition of "Analyzing Consumers' Perception of OTC Drugs in India" to their offering.
The Indian Pharmaceutical Industry today is in the front rank of India's science-based industries with wide ranging capabilities in the complex field of drug manufacture and technology. A highly organized sector, the Indian Pharma Industry is estimated to be worth USD4.5 billion, growing at about eight to nine percent annually. It ranks very high in the third world, in terms of technology, quality and range of medicines manufactured. From simple headache pills to sophisticated antibiotics and complex cardiac compounds, almost every type of medicine is now made indigenously.
July 12, 2007 - Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c62410) has announced the addition of "Analyzing Consumers' Perception of OTC Drugs in India" to their offering.
The Indian Pharmaceutical Industry today is in the front rank of India's science-based industries with wide ranging capabilities in the complex field of drug manufacture and technology. A highly organized sector, the Indian Pharma Industry is estimated to be worth USD4.5 billion, growing at about eight to nine percent annually. It ranks very high in the third world, in terms of technology, quality and range of medicines manufactured. From simple headache pills to sophisticated antibiotics and complex cardiac compounds, almost every type of medicine is now made indigenously.
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