Institution
North Bengal Medical College
Other•Darjeeling, India•
About: North Bengal Medical College is a other organization based out in Darjeeling, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Cancer. The organization has 624 authors who have published 691 publications receiving 5492 citations.
Topics: Population, Cancer, Biopsy, Pregnancy, Airway
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: 1. pattern of STDs in Davangere, India; changing trends of sexually transmitted diseases at Rohtak; andCharacterization of patients with multiple sexually transmitted infections: A hospital-based survey.
Abstract: 1. Siddappa K, Kumar VJ, Ravindra K. Pattern of STDs in Davangere. Indian J Sex Transm Dis 1990;11:39-42. 2. Jain VK, Dayal S, Aggarwal K, et al.. Changing trends of sexually transmitted diseases at Rohtak. Indian J Sex Trans Dis 2008;29:23-5. 3. Narayanan B. A retrospective study of the patterns of sexually transmitted diseases during a ten year study period. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol 2005;71:333-7. 4. Choudhry S, Ramachandran VG, Das S, Bhattacharya SN, Mogha NS. Characterization of patients with multiple sexually transmitted infections: A hospital-based survey. Indian J Sex Trans Dis 2010;31:87-91. 5. Puri KJ, Madan A, Bajaj K. Incidence of various causes of vaginal discharge among sexually active females in age group 20-40 years. Indian J Dermatol Venereol Leprol 2003;69:122-5.
13 citations
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TL;DR: Recommendations for influenza vaccination in high-risk individuals and help implement best practices in the South Asian region and improve coverage of influenza vaccination to achieve better outcomes in this population are provided.
Abstract: Influenza is a global public health problem and concern especially in high risk people. Prevention plays a key role in avoiding complications of influenza related illnesses. Despite the existing prevalence of influenza, and documented importance of vaccination, the uptake of influenza vaccine is very poor. This document provide recommendations for influenza vaccination in high-risk individuals and help implement best practices in the South Asian region and improve coverage of influenza vaccination to achieve better outcomes in this population.
13 citations
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TL;DR: Elderly patients deserve same opportunity as younger patients for treatment and survival options from the oncologist, and there were differences between two groups in terms of performance status, treatment acceptance, and treatment modality prescribed.
Abstract: Background and purpose: This prospective study aimed to assess the profiles of elderly cancer patient to optimize cancer care in Indian setup. The profiles have been compared with that of younger patients in terms of epidemiological, clinical data, co-morbidity, treatment, toxicity, clinical outcome, and survival pattern. Materials and Methods: The study comprised cancer patients attending radiotherapy outdoor (November 2005 to June 2006). There were 104 patients of age ≥60 years (elderly group) and 121 patients of 45-59 years (younger group). Results: Elderly group had median age 65 years (60-88 years) with M:F = 1:1. The younger group had median age 50 years (45-59 years) with M:F = 1:2. Elderly had higher proportion of gastrointestinal and genito-urinary tract malignancies. Younger group had higher proportion of breast, lymphoma, and brain tumor. 13% had co-morbidity, 50% received treatment, 27% were treated with radiotherapy with or without surgery, and two-third of these cases belong to elderly group. Majority tolerated treatment well. 10% had significant grade of toxicity. 57% of elderly patients did not accept and one-fourth of all cases did not complete the prescribed treatment. 88% cases were responders of which 70% showed complete response. There were no differences between two groups. At 12 months 35% of treated patients came for follow-up. At first 12 months, 60-70% were alive without disease. Conclusion: There were differences between two groups in terms of performance status, treatment acceptance, and treatment modality prescribed. Elderly patients deserve same opportunity as younger patients for treatment and survival options from the oncologist.
13 citations
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TL;DR: This article is a narrative review about how appropriate authorship can be achieved, a brief mention about various scientific misconducts, the reason and consequences of such misconducts and finally, the policies to be adopted by the aspiring authors to avert these problems.
Abstract: This article is a narrative review about how appropriate authorship can be achieved, a brief mention about various scientific misconducts, the reason and consequences of such misconducts and finally, the policies to be adopted by the aspiring authors to avert these problems. The literature search was performed in the Google and PubMed using 'scientific misconduct', 'honorary/ghost authorship', 'publish-or-perish', 'plagiarism' and other related key words and phrases. More than 300 free full-text articles published from 1990 to 2015 were retrieved and studied. Many consensus views have been presented regarding what constitutes authorship, the authorship order and different scientific misconducts. The conflicts about authorship issues related to publication of dissertation, the area of the grey zone have been discussed. Suggestions from different authorities about improving the existing inappropriate authorship issues have been included.
13 citations
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TL;DR: Frequent amplification and over-expression of ATR and PARP1 were further confirmed in cervical lesions, indicating their association with poor prognosis of advanced CSCC patients.
13 citations
Authors
Showing all 626 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Gautam Bandyopadhyay | 53 | 176 | 10675 |
Parimal Pal | 31 | 130 | 2866 |
Anup Roy | 26 | 82 | 1665 |
Sabyasachi Ghosh | 25 | 123 | 1730 |
Saswat Chakrabarti | 19 | 227 | 1495 |
Sriparna Basu | 19 | 74 | 1268 |
Ranadip Chowdhury | 17 | 56 | 2141 |
Prem Prakash Tripathi | 16 | 35 | 782 |
K. J. Mukherjee | 16 | 43 | 907 |
Subrata Das | 16 | 66 | 870 |
Manavi Chatterjee | 15 | 26 | 913 |
Ranjan Pal | 14 | 93 | 728 |
Sabyasachi Das | 14 | 23 | 536 |
Somprakas Basu | 13 | 57 | 1312 |
Arunansu Talukdar | 12 | 57 | 510 |