Wichtige gute Informationen zur Indien Einreise für Patienten
Important good Information for patient travelers to India
Indien erleichtert die Visa-Beantragung
Lange wurde es angekündigt, nun ist es endlich so weit: Die indische Regierung erlaubt einer ganzen Reihe von weiteren Ländern, darunter auch Deutschland, nun ebenfalls unbürokratischer an Touristenvisa zu gelangen – die sogenannten Tourist Visa on Arrival.
Berechtigt zum Erwerb von Visa on Arrival sind Ausländer, die Indien ausschließlich besuchen möchten, um dort Urlaub zu machen, also um sich zu erholen, um das Land zu besichtigen, aber auch wenn sie Freunde oder Verwandte besuchen möchten, sich dort für kurze Zeit einer medizinischen Behandlung unterziehen wollen oder zu einem kurzen informellen Geschäftsbesuch nach Indien reisen.
Das sind wichtige großartige Neuigkeiten, die ich sofort weitergeben möchte!
Mein Insider Tipp: Ich habe mein Visum bereits vor Jahren postalisch via Internet über einen sogenannten Visa-Service vollkommen ohne Komplikationen beantragt. Ich wäre 2010 gar nicht in der Lage gewesen eine Botschaft persönlich aufzusuchen!
Visitors from 43 countries no longer have to queue up at local consulates, but can instead apply for their visas online and collect them at airports.
Tipp:
Ich empfehle je nach Gesundheitszustand ebenfalls den Behinderten-Service oder Reisebegleitservice der Fluggesellschaft vor Reiseantritt zu beantragen, und sich über Hilfestellung und Leistungen zu informieren.Auch wenn Sie eine Begleitperson an ihrer Seite wissen, Sie haben ja auch noch Gepäck und Ihre Kondition zu bewältigen. Die Flugdauer ab Frankfurt/ Main beträgt 7,5 Stunden nach Neu Delhi.
Nutech Mediworld New Delhi
Ich bekam über ihn kürzlich eine Einladung nach Genf, um dort repräsentativ über meine Krankengeschichte und Patientenperspektive zu referieren.
Auf der Konferenz " Intersections" wurde ich gebeten, natürlich auch über Lyme Borreliose und über mein aktuelles Befinden zu berichten.
I am talking with Prof. Aditya Bharadwaj for the first time, as you see on the picture below.
He is a wonderful person, and he is currently working in Geneva. He invited me to Geneva, to speak as patient advocate on his conference "Intersections", and to show up my perspective and medical history. Of course including the topic of Lyme Disease and my current condition!
Exiting, exiting...
Patient Advocacy
Vor wenigen Wochen in Genf
A few weeks ago in Geneva
Ich habe über meine Krankengeschichte in Kurzform referiert. Meine Patientenperspektive repräsentativ präsentiert, die eindeutig den Nutzen der Humanen Embryonalen Stammzellen für viele unheilbare Krankheiten mehr als deutlich macht, die ich erstmals vor vier Jahren erstmals in Indien erhalten durfte.
I hold a slide presentation from a patients point of view. The benefit and proof of the future of medicine is well to demonstrate on patients improvements. Four years ago I was able to receive my first HPBSC Therapie in India.
Slide presentation
Advocacy & Stem Cells from a Patients Perspective and my short medical history
Hier geht es zur Power Point meines Vortrages
HPBSC- My Journey to Healing -Geneva Nov. 2014
Dr. Petra Hopf - Vortrag - Lecture
Aditya Bharadwaj Graduate Institute Geneva
Research Professor, Anthropology and Sociology of Development
Position(s) at the Institute
- Research Professor, Anthropology and Sociology of Development
Profile
PhD University of Bristol, United Kingdom
Professor Bharadwaj joined the Graduate Institute as Research Professor of Anthropology and Sociology in January 2013. He completed doctoral research at the University of Bristol and post-doctoral fellowship at Cardiff University before joining University of Edinburgh where he taught and researched for over seven years. His research uncovers the local and global dimensions underscoring the production, utilisation and circulation of biomedicine and biotechnologies. In particular his research examines: (a) global politics of biotechnologies (b) emerging bioeconomies (c) cultural production of knowledge (d) subject formation (e) ethical and moral governance (f) transnational therapeutic mobility. He is currently supervising diverse PhD topics ranging from pregnancy loss in Mexico, assisted reproductive technologies in Columbia to genetic patient organisations in Scotland. In particular his academic and research interests are focused on the burgeoning rise of bioscience and biotechnologies in India. His current research covers two major contemporary developments in the domain of bioscience in India, namely: assisted reproductive technologies and human embryonic stem cells. Through this work he is examining the emerging face of India’s tryst with biotechnologies in a globalised research system. This principally entails: (a) mapping transnational connections linking patients, research laboratories and clinics (b) understanding national/local scientific contexts (c) interrogating moral and ethical debates cross culturally (d) explaining global governance and local regulation of new biotechnologies. Aditya has recently been awarded European Research Council (ERC) Consolidator Grant for a project examining the emergence of stem cell biotechnologies in India. The project will explain the agential and structural processes authoring unprecedented new developments in stem cell research and therapeutics in India. The research seeks to understand how stem cell biotechnologies straddle multiple interlaced domains ranging from public health, governance, ethics, markets to therapeutic application.
Professor Bharadwaj joined the Graduate Institute as Research Professor of Anthropology and Sociology in January 2013. He completed doctoral research at the University of Bristol and post-doctoral fellowship at Cardiff University before joining University of Edinburgh where he taught and researched for over seven years. His research uncovers the local and global dimensions underscoring the production, utilisation and circulation of biomedicine and biotechnologies. In particular his research examines: (a) global politics of biotechnologies (b) emerging bioeconomies (c) cultural production of knowledge (d) subject formation (e) ethical and moral governance (f) transnational therapeutic mobility. He is currently supervising diverse PhD topics ranging from pregnancy loss in Mexico, assisted reproductive technologies in Columbia to genetic patient organisations in Scotland. In particular his academic and research interests are focused on the burgeoning rise of bioscience and biotechnologies in India. His current research covers two major contemporary developments in the domain of bioscience in India, namely: assisted reproductive technologies and human embryonic stem cells. Through this work he is examining the emerging face of India’s tryst with biotechnologies in a globalised research system. This principally entails: (a) mapping transnational connections linking patients, research laboratories and clinics (b) understanding national/local scientific contexts (c) interrogating moral and ethical debates cross culturally (d) explaining global governance and local regulation of new biotechnologies. Aditya has recently been awarded European Research Council (ERC) Consolidator Grant for a project examining the emergence of stem cell biotechnologies in India. The project will explain the agential and structural processes authoring unprecedented new developments in stem cell research and therapeutics in India. The research seeks to understand how stem cell biotechnologies straddle multiple interlaced domains ranging from public health, governance, ethics, markets to therapeutic application.
Areas of Expertise
- Biomedicine (in local/global perspective)
- Biotechnologies (embryonic stem cells/molecular genetics)
- Reproductive health and technologies (medically managed birth/new reproductive technologies)
- Area study (south Asia/India)
Selected publications
Books
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Conceptions: Infertility and Procreative Modernity in India. Berghahn Books, 2014.
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Local Cells, Global Science: The Proliferation of Stem Cell Technologies in India. Routledge, 2009. (lead authored with Glasner, P).
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Risky Relations: Family, Kinship and the New Genetics. Berg, 2005 (coauthored with Featherstone, K, Atkinson, P and Clarke, A).
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Experimental Subjectification: The Pursuit of Human Embryonic Stem Cells in India, 2013, Ethnos, Vol. 76, No. 1, pp – 84-107.
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Subaltern Biology? Local Biologies, Indian Odysseys and the Pursuit of Human Embryonic Stem Cell Therapies, 2013, Medical Anthropology, Vol. 32, No. 4, pp – 359-73
-
Ethic of Consensibility, Subaltern Ethicality: The Clinical Application of Embryonic Stem Cells in India, 2013, Biosocities, Vol. 8, pp – 25-40.
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Enculturating Cells: Anthropology, Substance, and Science of Stem Cells. Annual Review of Anthropology, 2012, Vol. 41, pp.303-17.
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Guest Editor, Introduction for the Special Issue of Culture Medicine and Psychiatry, Sacred Conceptions: Religion in the Global Practice of IVF', 2006
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Clinical Theodicies: The Enchanted World of Uncertain Science and Clinical Conception in India'. Culture Medicine and Psychiatry special issue Sacred Conceptions: Religion in the Global Practice of IVF', 2006, Vol. 30, No. 4, pp.451-465.
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Why Adoption is not an Option in India: The Visibility of
Infertility, the Secrecy of Donor Insemination, and other Cultural
Complexities', Social Science and Medicine, 2003, Vol. 56, pp.1867-1880.
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Uncertain Risk: Genetic Screening for Susceptibility of Haemochromatosis', Health Risk and Society, 2002, Vol. 4, No. 3, pp.227-240.
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How Some Indian Baby Makers are Made: Media Narratives and Assisted Conception in India', Anthropology and Medicine, 2000. Vol. 7, No. 1, pp.63-78.
Genf - Geneva - Some chairs and speakers - Nov. 2014
Brandneu auf dem Markt, ein Buchtipp!
Ein neues Buch erzählt inspirierend darüber, wie die Stammzellen Forschung im konservativen Amerika Einzug hält!Aus der Patienten-Perspektive wird eindrucksvoll über die Fürsprache der Einsatzmöglichkeiten berichtet.
New Book worth to read!
"You don’t often hear of books dedicated to patient advocacy in the stem cell field. But Inevitable Collision, by Tory Williams, may inspire more.
Williams, at one time a school teacher, single mother, and aspiring novelist, has pledged to donate all the proceeds of her book, published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., to fund the Alabama Institute of Medicine, which she and stem cell advocate Roman Reed helped to establish, to help raise funds for stem cell research in her home state.
But that’s getting ahead of the story. Inevitable Collision starts as an up close and personal account of one of the patients, TJ Atchison, who enrolled in Geron Corporation’s first human clinical trial to treat spinal cord injuries with human embryonic stem cells."
Read more:
Forbes- Stem Cell Advocacy and the Patients Perspective
http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnfarrell/2014/11/28/stem-cell-advocacy-and-the-patients-perspective/
10 of the Most Wheelchair Accessible Beaches in the World
Sirens Resort/ Greece
Check this out:
http://www.curbfreewithcorylee.com/2014/11/20/most-wheelchair-accessible-beaches-in-the-world/
Check this out:
http://www.curbfreewithcorylee.com/2014/11/20/most-wheelchair-accessible-beaches-in-the-world/
Everything is possible! Always!
Alles ist möglich! Immer!
Always believe something wonderful is going to happen!
Christine
Truth alone will endure, all the rest will be swept away before the tide of time. I must continue to bear testimony to truth even if I am forsaken by all. Mine may today be a voice in the wilderness, but it will be heard when all other voices are silenced, if it is the voice of Truth.