Institution
Government of India
Government•New Delhi, India•
About: Government of India is a government organization based out in New Delhi, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Government. The organization has 2945 authors who have published 2999 publications receiving 44942 citations. The organization is also known as: Union Government & Central Government.
Topics: Population, Government, Health care, Public health, Dielectric
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: There is a need to increase resource allocation, coordinate multisectoral policy interventions, and enhance the engagement of the health system in activities related to chronic disease prevention and control.
516 citations
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TL;DR: Monitoring and evaluation exercises carried out show that the existing model of inpatient treatment and of shared responsibility between central and state governments is partially successful, and the establishment of drug treatment clinics on pilot basis with a focus on outpatient treatment and direct support from the DDAP is showing encouraging results.
Abstract: Substance use disorder (SUD) is a major problem worldwide, including in India, and contributes significantly to morbidity and mortality. The Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment, Government of India, addresses the prevention and rehabilitation aspect of substance use through the establishment of “rehabilitation centers” run by nongovernmental organizations. The Drug De-addiction Programme (DDAP) was initiated in 1988 under the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, Government of India, and was mandated with provision of treatment for SUDs. Through the DDAP, de-addiction centers (DACs) have been established in government hospitals by providing a one-time financial grant by the central government, with the recurring expenses to be borne by the state governments. In addition, some premier institutions as well as DACs from Northeastern region are provided annual recurring grants for their functioning. Capacity building has been a major focus area of DDAP in which nonspecialist medical officers working in government hospitals have been trained, and various training materials have been developed. Another major area of work is the development of “drug abuse monitoring system” to track the pattern of drug use and profile among individuals seeking treatment in the DACs. Monitoring and evaluation exercises carried out show that the existing model of inpatient treatment and of shared responsibility between central and state governments is partially successful. The establishment of drug treatment clinics on pilot basis with a focus on outpatient treatment and direct support from the DDAP for staff as well as for medicines is showing encouraging results.
471 citations
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TL;DR: This manuscript expounds the current advances and cross-talks the developments made in the of EPR effect-based therapeutics in cancer therapy along with a transactional view of its current clinical and industrial aspects.
460 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the recent developments in the field of production, storage, transport and delivery of hydrogen along with environmental and safety aspects of its use as an energy carrier.
Abstract: Mobility (transport of people and goods) is a socio-economic reality and need for which is bound to grow in the coming years. Modes of transport should be safe, economic and reasonably environmental friendly. Hydrogen could be ideal as a synthetic energy carrier for transport sector as its gravimetric energy density is very high, abundantly available in combined form on the earth and its oxidation product (water) does not contribute to greenhouse gas emissions. However, its sustainable production from renewable resources economically, on-board storage to provide desirable driving range, usage in durable energy conversion devices and development of infrastructure for its delivery remain significant challenges. In this article, recent developments in the field of production, storage, transport and delivery of hydrogen along with environmental and safety aspects of its use as an energy carrier are presented. Almost any energy source can be used to produce hydrogen. Presently, non-renewable sources dominate hydrogen production processes but the need of the hour is to develop and promote the share of renewable sources for hydrogen production to make it completely sustainable. Hydrogen may be used as fuel for almost any application, where fossil fuels are used presently and would offer immediate benefits over the conventional fuels, if produced from renewable sources. For achieving a successful "hydrogen economy" in the near future, the technical and economic challenges associated with hydrogen must be addressed quickly. Finding feasible solutions to different challenges may take some time but technological breakthrough by way of on-going efforts do promise hydrogen as the ultimate solution for meeting our future energy needs for the transport sector.
433 citations
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TL;DR: The Elliptic Curve Cryptography algorithm and its suitability for smart cards is described and it is shown that the algorithm is suitable for smart card security.
Abstract: This paper describes the Elliptic Curve Cryptography algorithm and its suitability for smart cards.
395 citations
Authors
Showing all 2961 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
M. Santosh | 103 | 1344 | 49846 |
Rakesh Kumar | 91 | 1959 | 39017 |
Sankaran Subramanian | 74 | 332 | 24680 |
S. V. Subramanian | 72 | 444 | 17132 |
Amit Kumar | 65 | 1618 | 19277 |
Arvind Subramanian | 64 | 220 | 20452 |
Rakesh Sharma | 60 | 673 | 14157 |
Anil Mishra | 55 | 178 | 10505 |
Kaushik Basu | 54 | 323 | 13030 |
Pulok K. Mukherjee | 54 | 296 | 10873 |
Maharaj K. Bhan | 53 | 207 | 11841 |
Kuldeep Singh | 51 | 431 | 11815 |
Rakesh Tuli | 47 | 165 | 7497 |
Dipak Kumar Sahoo | 47 | 234 | 7293 |
M. Rajeevan | 46 | 164 | 9115 |