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Working Papers | 2014

What Determines Performance Gap Index of
Healthcare in Gujarat?

Shreekant Iyengar and Ravindra H. Dholakia

Health performance of Gujarat viewed in terms of the Human Development Index (HDI) portrays it as a medium performer in the country. However, the index of health component for Gujarat is found to be positively contributing to the HDI ranking of the state. It is, therefore, crucial to review the status of health performance of Gujarat among the other states for improving its relative standing in human development. In this context the present paper attempts to identify the gaps in performance of the health related outcome, output and input indicators from the best performers in each indicator. Moreover, the paper also reviews the trends in health performance of Gujarat over time and also estimates the effectiveness of the state in converting its health inputs to outputs and outputs to outcomes. The results indicate that the outcome indicators have improved in the absolute sense but have high performance gaps except the maternal mortality rate (MMR). Majority of the output and input indicators, however, show poor absolute performance and high performance gaps that have been expanding over time. The effectiveness of conversion of health indicators in Gujarat suggests that while the state has moved above average in conversion of outputs into outcomes, it has moved at a slightly below average level in converting its inputs to outputs over time. Improving the health status of Gujarat requires targeted efforts in specific areas such as controlling neo-natal deaths, improving coverage of children under immunization and address malnourishment. Additionally, building adequate health infrastructure and employing required manpower are also relevant.

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Working Papers | 2014

Hub-based Network Analysis and Change in the US Air Transport System (ATS)

Hans Huber

The US has been a pioneer w.r.t. the modern hub-and-spoke (HS) system which found near unequivocal support among aviation scholars over the last few decades. The author takes a more critical approach with regards to the central role that hub airports play within the ATS, particularly when assessing operational decisions that in effect may lead to highly skewed traffic distributions and increasing spatial concentration of air traffic. The behavior of airlines to organize traffic around central airports can be evaluated more meaningfully by differentiating for their constituent route-structures and comparing these ensembles for the largest airports in the entire system. A new understanding of behavior and evolution of the ATS as an aggregate of hub-driven networks can be obtained and alternative HS structures be compared. Our understanding of the scope of feasible hub strategies may expand beyond conventional strategies of 'consolidation' versus 'de-hubbing' and their impact on the overall ATS may plausibly be shown.

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Working Papers | 2014

Ethics Statements on Websites of Indian Companies

Meenakshi Sharma

This paper examines the corporate code of ethics of Indian companies as displayed on their websites. With the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) having made it mandatory for listed companies to frame a code of conduct and to place it on their websites, the question arises whether corporations are doing so merely as a requirement or whether they seem to be using it to make the best impact on the general public through the powerful mass medium of the internet. The official website of a company is its face to the wider world, including and beyond its various stakeholders, and it would thus be expected that companies would be keen to use this medium to present their formulated codes to project their image as ethically strong and transparent entities.

The codes of 60 top Indian companies displayed on their websites were studied for location of ethics statements, and the readability of these was calculated using the Flesch reading ease and Flesch-Kincaid grade level scores. The implication from the findings is that companies have the opportunity to present their ethical position with greater care on readability so that the material is comprehensible to a larger set of the public. In terms of layout too, the ethics codes could be made more easily accessible. More care also needs to go into framing of ethics statements as values-based rather than rule-based. This would help not only fulfil a mandatory requirement but also in articulating a unique identity for internal stakeholders to embrace, and for building a distinct image among competitors, in the public mind.

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Working Papers | 2014

A Multi-Period Two Stage Stochastic Programming Based Decision Support System for Strategic Planning in Process Industries: A Case of an Integrated Iron and Steel Company

Narain Gupta, Goutam Dutta, and Robert Fourer

The paper introduces the application of a generic, multiple period, two stage stochastic programming based Decision Support System (DSS) in an integrated steel company. We demonstrate that a generic, user friendly stochastic optimization based DSS can be used for planning in a probabilistic demand situation. We conduct a set of experiments based on the stochastic variability of the demand of finished steel. A two stage stochastic programming with recourse model is implemented in the DSS, and tested with real data from a steel company in North America. This application demonstrates the need for stochastic optimization in the process industry. The value of stochastic solution resulted from the implementation of steel company real data in the DSS is 1.61%.

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Working Papers | 2014

Cause Related Marketing - An Indian Overview

Sonal Kureshi and Sujo Thomas

The Indian market has witnessed all types of organizations ranging from national to multinational to regional as well as local adopting cause related marketing (CRM) practice since the late nineties. They started partnering with non-profit organizations linking brands to social cause. The main focus of this study was to provide insights about the extent and nature of CRM prevalent in the Indian market. This study was motivated by the fact that very little data pertaining to CRM practices in India was available in the academic as well as non-academic sources. This study examined various CRM initiatives that were announced during 1999 to 2012. These were identified by conducting an internet search using key word as well as visiting company and partnering organizations websites. One newspaper and one business magazine for those years were scanned. Only those CRM activities were included which satisfied definitions provided by Varadarajan and Menon (1988) or Kotler and Lee (2005) These initiatives were analyzed by classifying them on a variety of parameters like type of company, type of partnering organization, nature of cause, type of brand etc. 142 initiatives were recorded over 14 years. Very few regional and local organizations seem to have adopted using CRM as a marketing practice. Non-durable essential brand like salt and tea were found to be using CRM more than other categories. More work in this area which investigates consumer insights about CRM would be enhance effectiveness of such programs.

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Working Papers | 2014

Police and the Rule of Law: Recent Developments
in India

Anurag K. Agarwal

For a country like India, which is committed to the rule of law, the role of police is undergoing changes very rapidly. It is primarily due to the fact that the country has transformed from a police state to welfare state since independence in 1947, and thereafter since India became a Republic in 1950, however, unprecedented changes, of late, in the governance of the country-with coalition politics being a major factor-have been witnessed raising important questions regarding the challenges faced by police in a modern welfare state within the dynamic legal framework. The relationship between the political Masters and the civil servants, including the police officers, has undergone a sea change, and lately more changes have been observed, which may not be very encouraging for a healthy and vibrant democratic country. With the Supreme Court being the final interpreter, often the police are at the receiving end. This paper examines some of the recent pronouncements of the Supreme Court and other High Courts and tries to analyse them vis-à-vis the understanding of the rule of law in India.

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Working Papers | 2014

Long Term Financing of Infrastructure

Sidharth Sinha

Infrastructure projects, given their long life, require long term financing. The main sources of long term financings are insurance and pension funds who seek long term investments with low credit risk. However, in India household financial savings are mainly invested in bank deposits. Insurance and pension funds account for only a small percentage of household financial savings. In addition most infrastructure projects do not qualify for investment by insurance and pension funds because of the complex risk profiles of these projects. This paper examines the steps taken by the government to enhance the flow of long term financing for infrastructure projects.

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Working Papers | 2014

Air pollution in Indian cities: short term mortality impacts and interactions with temperature

Hem H. Dholakia, Dhiman Bhadra, and Amit Garg

Background: Indian cities are among the most polluted globally, yet assessments of short term mortality impacts due to pollution have been limited. Furthermore, studies examining temperature-pollution interactions on mortality are largely absent. Addressing this gap remains important in providing research evidence to better link health outcomes and air quality standards for India.

Methods: Daily all-cause mortality, temperature, humidity and particulate matter less than 10 microns (PM10) data were collected for five cities-Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Mumbai and Shimla spanning 2005 - 2012. Poisson regression models were developed to study short term impacts of PM10 as well as temperature-pollution interactions on daily all-cause mortality.

Results: We find that mortality associated with a 10 µg/m3 PM10 increase is highest for Shimla (1.36%, 95% confidence interval = -0.38% to 3.1%) and the least for Ahmedabad (0.16%, 95% CI = -0.31% to 0.62%). The corresponding values for Bangalore, Hyderabad and Mumbai are 0.22% (-0.04% - 0.49%), 0.85% (0.06% - 1.63%) and 0.2% (0.1% - 0.3%) respectively. The relative health benefits of reducing pollution are higher for cleaner cities (Shimla) as opposed to dirtier cities (Mumbai). Overall we find that temperature and pollution interactions do not significantly impact mortality for the cities studied.

Conclusions: This is one of the first multi-city studies that assess heterogeneity of air pollution impacts and possible modification due to temperature in Indian cities that are spread across climatic regions and topographies. Our findings highlight the need for pursuing stringent pollution control policies in Indian cities to minimize health impacts.

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Working Papers | 2014

Medical Negligence and Compensation in India: How Much is Just and Effective?

Anurag K. Agarwal

There is no denying the fact that human life is precious and in cases of medical negligence, the judges find it extremely difficult to decide on the quantum of compensation as the quantum is highly subjective in nature, and despite the best efforts of the legislature to enact certain laws which can somehow provide a framework for arriving at a quantum, and also interpretation by the judiciary for so many decades, it has not yet been finally settled as to what should be the method used for determining compensation in cases of medical negligence. The multiplier method-followed typically in motor accident cases-provides certainty but does not often end up in arriving at 'just and adequate compensation'. Hence, the courts rarely follow it in cases of medical negligence. A recent case-Kunal Saha-decided by the Supreme Court in October 2013 has once again raised this extremely important and unsettled issue for debate and discussion. Whatever the quantum of compensation, does it have any serious financial, or any, effect on the erring hospitals and medical professionals is also debatable. This paper examines the issues related to just, adequate and effective compensation in cases of medical negligence and provides certain suggestions.

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Working Papers | 2014

Basic Emergency Obstetric Care for mothers and newborns through 24 x 7 primary health centres A case study of three 24/7 PHCs from a high focus district in India

Parvathy Raman, Bharati Sharma, and K. V. Ramani

The National Rural health Mission created 24X7 Primary Health Centres in order to provide basic emergency and obstetric services to women. The current study looked into how far the above NRHM objective has been met.
Our study used the case methodology based on the WHO framework for providing safe care as a benchmark. Our resource constraints limited our study to examine the working of only three 24x7 PHCs; one each from an urban, semi-rural, and a rural block of a high focus district in a large Indian State. These blocks were selected purposefully based on geographical terrain and general socio-economic profile. Data sources were statistics from the district and block health offices, a checklist to assess supplies and equipment for childbirth and newborn care in the PHCs, and eleven in-depth interviews with Block Health Officers, PHC medical officers, and nurse-midwives.
Our study showed that the urban PHC attracted more women than the rural and semi-urban PHCs. Reasons for preferring the urban PHC were due to easy access, staff presence and availability of medicines and drugs. An active female worker who stays close to the urban PHC has been very successful in getting women to the PHC. The major reasons for non-utilization in the rural block include geographically difficult area, and the tradition of home deliveries, while the relatively low utilization of the semi-urban PHC is due to presence of private practitioners nearby. Our study also showed that women prefer to go to private practitioners since JSY (Janani Suraksha Yojana) maternity benefits are available for institutional deliveries in public or private facilities, and therefore 24 X 7 PHCs were not an added attraction if private facilities are available nearby. Monitoring at various levels needs to be strengthened to improve the effective service delivery in public health facilities.
Our observations are from a sample of three 24/7 PHCs in a high focus district, and hence cannot be generalized.

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