case study 2 ryo

Snapsolve any problem by taking a picture. Try it in the Numerade app?

What happened in the Kolkata rape case that triggered doctors’ protests?

Activists and doctors in India demand better safeguarding of women and medical professionals after a trainee medic was raped and murdered in Kolkata.

Following a murder of a 31 year old post-graduate trainee (PGT) doctor by rape and torture inside a government hospital, activists of different humanitarian and political organisations and medical professionals participate in a rally with posters and torches demanding adequate intervention of the ruling government and exemplary punishment of the culprits, in Kolkata, India, Tuesday, Aug. 13, 2024.

Activists and doctors across India continued to protest on Wednesday to demand justice for a female doctor, who was raped and murdered while on duty in a hospital in the eastern city of Kolkata.

Feminist groups rallied on the streets in protests titled “Reclaim the Night” in Kolkata overnight on Wednesday – on the eve of India’s independence day – in solidarity with the victim, demanding the principal of RG Kar Medical College resign. Some feminist protesters also marched well beyond Kolkata, including in the capital Delhi.

Keep reading

Doctors across india protest rape and murder of medic in kolkata, india supreme court to monitor investigations into manipur sexual violence, goals not guns: how a girls football team in india’s manipur beats violence, four arrested after spanish blogger on india motorcycle tour gangraped.

While the protests were largely peaceful, a small mob of men stormed the medical college and vandalised property. This group was dispersed by the police.

This comes after two days of nationwide protests by doctors following the incident at RG Kar Medical College in West Bengal’s capital city. “Sit-in demonstrations and agitation in the hospital campus will continue,” one of the protesting doctors, identified as Dr Mridul, told Al Jazeera.

Services in some medical centres were halted indefinitely, and marches and vigils shed light on issues of sexual violence, as well as doctors’ safety in the world’s most populous nation.

What happened to the doctor in Kolkata?

A 31-year-old trainee doctor’s dead body, bearing multiple injuries, was found on August 9 in a government teaching hospital in Kolkata.

The parents of the victim were initially told “by hospital authorities that their daughter had committed suicide,” lawyer and women’s rights activist Vrinda Grover told Al Jazeera. But an autopsy confirmed that the victim was raped and killed.

Grover has appeared for victims in sexual violence cases in India in the past, including Bilkis Bano , a Muslim woman who was gang-raped during the 2002 Gujarat riots, and Soni Sori, a tribal activist based in Chhattisgarh state.

Thousands of doctors marched in Kolkata on Monday, demanding better security measures and justice for the victim.

On Tuesday, the Kolkata High Court transferred the case to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).

The Federation of Resident Doctors Association (FORDA) called for a nationwide halting of elective services in hospitals starting on Monday. Elective services are medical treatments that can be deferred or are not deemed medically necessary.

Doctors hold posters to protest the rape and murder of a young medic from Kolkata, at the Government General Hospital in Vijayawada on August 14

On Tuesday, FORDA announced on its X account that it is calling off the strike after Health Minister Jagat Prakash Nadda accepted protest demands.

One of these demands was solidifying the Central Protection Act, intended to be a central law to protect medical professionals from violence, which was proposed in the parliament’s lower house in 2022, but has not yet been enacted.

FORDA said that the ministry would begin working on the Act within 15 days of the news release, and that a written statement from the ministry was expected to be released soon.

Press release regarding call off of strike. In our fight for the sad incident at R G Kar, the demands raised by us have been met in full by the @OfficeofJPNadda , with concrete steps in place, and not just verbal assurances. Central Healthcare Protection Act ratification… pic.twitter.com/OXdSZgM1Jc — FORDA INDIA (@FordaIndia) August 13, 2024

Why are some Indian doctors continuing to protest?

However, other doctors’ federations and hospitals have said they will not back down on the strike until a concrete solution is found, including a central law to curb attacks on doctors.

Those continuing to strike included the Federation of All India Medical Associations (FAIMA), Delhi-based All India Institute Of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) and Indira Gandhi Hospital, local media reported.

Ragunandan Dixit, the general secretary of the AIIMS Resident Doctors’ Association, said that the indefinite strike will continue until their demands are met, including a written guarantee of the implementation of the Central Protection Act.

Medical professionals in India want a central law that makes violence against doctors a non-bailable, punishable offence, in hopes that it deters such violent crimes against doctors in the future.

Those continuing to protest also call for the dismissal of the principal of the college, who was transferred. “We’re demanding his termination, not just transfer,” Dr Abdul Waqim Khan, a protesting doctor told ANI news agency. “We’re also demanding a death penalty for the criminal,” he added.

“Calling off the strike now would mean that female resident doctors might never receive justice,” Dr Dhruv Chauhan, member of the National Council of the Indian Medical Association’s Junior Doctors’ Network told local news agency Press Trust of India (PTI).

Which states in India saw doctors’ protests?

While the protests started in West Bengal’s Kolkata on Monday, they spread across the country on Tuesday.

The capital New Delhi, union territory Chandigarh, Uttar Pradesh capital Lucknow and city Prayagraj, Bihar capital Patna and southern state Goa also saw doctors’ protests.

Interactive_India_doctor_rape_protests_August14_2024

Who is the suspect in the Kolkata rape case?

Local media reported that the police arrested suspect Sanjoy Roy, a civic volunteer who would visit the hospital often. He has unrestricted access to the ward and the police found compelling evidence against him.

The parents of the victim told the court that they suspect that it was a case of gang rape, local media reported.

Why is sexual violence on the rise in India?

Sexual violence is rampant in India, where 90 rapes were reported on average every day in 2022.

Laws against sexual violence were made stricter following a rape case in 2012, when a 22-year-old physiotherapy intern was brutally gang-raped and murdered on a bus in Delhi. Four men were hanged for the gang rape, which had triggered a nationwide protests.

But despite new laws in place, “the graph of sexual violence in India continues to spiral unabated,” said Grover.

She added that in her experience at most workplaces, scant attention is paid to diligent and rigorous enforcement of the laws.

“It is regrettable that government and institutions respond only after the woman has already suffered sexual assault and often succumbed to death in the incident,” she added, saying preventive measures are not taken.

In many rape cases in India, perpetrators have not been held accountable. In 2002, Bano was raped by 11 men, who were sentenced to life imprisonment. In 2022, the government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi authorised the release of the men, who were greeted with applause and garlands upon their release.

However, their remission was overruled and the Supreme Court sent the rapists back to jail after public outcry.

Grover believes that the death penalty will not deter rapists until India addresses the deeply entrenched problem of sexual violence. “For any change, India as a society will have to confront and challenge, patriarchy, discrimination and inequality that is embedded in our homes, families, cultural practices, social norms and religious traditions”.

What makes this case particularly prominent is that it happened in Kolkata, Sandip Roy, a freelance contributor to NPR, told Al Jazeera. “Kolkata actually prided itself for a long time on being really low in the case of violence against women and being relatively safe for women.”

A National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) report said that Kolkata had the lowest number of rape cases in 2021 among 19 metropolitan cities, with 11 cases in the whole year. In comparison, New Delhi was reported to have recorded 1, 226 cases that year.

Prime Minister Modi’s governing Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) has called for dismissing the government in West Bengal, where Kolkata is located, led by Mamata Banerjee of All India Trinamool Congress (AITC). Banerjee’s party is part of the opposition alliance.

Rahul Gandhi, the leader of the opposition in parliament, also called for justice for the victim.

“The attempt to save the accused instead of providing justice to the victim raises serious questions on the hospital and the local administration,” he posted on X on Wednesday.

Roy spoke about the politicisation of the case since an opposition party governs West Bengal. “The local government’s opposition will try to make this an issue of women’s safety in the state,” he said.

Have doctors in India protested before?

Roy explained to Al Jazeera that this case is an overlap of two kinds of violence, the violence against a woman, as well as violence against “an overworked medical professional”.

Doctors in India do not have sufficient workplace security, and attacks on doctors have started protests in India before.

In 2019, two junior doctors were physically assaulted in Kolkata’s Nil Ratan Sircar Medical College and Hospital (NRSMCH) by a mob of people after a 75-year-old patient passed away in the hospital.

Those attacks set off doctors’ protests in Kolkata, and senior doctors in West Bengal offered to resign from their positions to express solidarity with the junior doctors who were attacked.

More than 75 percent of Indian doctors have faced some form of violence, according to a survey by the Indian Medical Association in 2015.

What happens next?

The case will now be handled by the CBI, which sent a team to the hospital premises to inspect the crime scene on Wednesday morning, local media reported.

According to Indian law, the investigation into a case of rape or gang rape is to be completed within two months from the date of lodging of the First Information Report (police complaint), according to Grover, the lawyer.

The highest court in West Bengal, which transferred the case from the local police to the CBI on Tuesday, has directed the central investigating agency to file periodic status reports regarding the progress of the investigation.

The FIR was filed on August 9, which means the investigation is expected to be completed by October 9.

Bengal women will create history with a night long protest in various major locations in the state for at 11.55pm on 14th of August’24,the night that’ll mark our 78th year as an independent country. The campaign, 'Women, Reclaim the Night: The Night is Ours', is aimed at seeking… pic.twitter.com/Si9fd6YGNb — purpleready (@epicnephrin_e) August 13, 2024

Case Western Reserve University

  • Our Latest News

Researchers awarded $2.8M federal grant to study potential treatment of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

stock image of infant feet

More than 3,400 sudden unexpected infant deaths are reported annually in the United States, making it the country’s biggest cause of death of infants from 1 month to 1 year old, according to the  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Most of these deaths are classified as Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), a disorder with numerous, unexplained causes that have plagued researchers for decades.

Now, with a new five-year, $2.8 million grant from the  National Institutes of Health , researchers from  Case Western Reserve University  and  University Hospitals Rainbow Babies & Children’s  will investigate SIDS, using a model they developed that mimics conditions associated with most SIDS cases.

They hope the federal support and new approach may provide a fresh perspective on what may cause SIDS. They may also be close to finding biomarkers in urine and blood that could help identify newborns who are more likely to die from it.

Peter MacFarlane

“A major challenge with SIDS research is developing an accurate model that reproduces many of the SIDS abnormal features,” said  Peter MacFarlane , associate professor and director of neonatology basic research at the  School of Medicine , UH Rainbow and lead investigator. “One of our model’s special features is that it allows us to simulate conditions surrounding many SIDS cases. We are then able to test some of our new theories about what can cause SIDS, like involuntary respiratory characteristics.”

In particular, MacFarlane and his team are focused on abnormal levels of certain proteins and cells in the brainstem and carotid body—two important components of the central and peripheral nervous system involved in regulating breathing that they believe might lead to SIDS.

“We are also testing a unique drug that may one day be used to prevent many SIDS cases from occurring,” MacFarlane said. “Our hope is that this research offers new insights into the causes of SIDS and could lead to early identification of at-risk infants so that we can intervene early enough to prevent such a devastating form of death from happening.”

For more information, please contact Patty Zamora at  [email protected] .

Pardon Our Interruption

As you were browsing something about your browser made us think you were a bot. There are a few reasons this might happen:

  • You've disabled JavaScript in your web browser.
  • You're a power user moving through this website with super-human speed.
  • You've disabled cookies in your web browser.
  • A third-party browser plugin, such as Ghostery or NoScript, is preventing JavaScript from running. Additional information is available in this support article .

To regain access, please make sure that cookies and JavaScript are enabled before reloading the page.

  • [email protected]
  • +971 507 888 742

SciAlert

Research Journal of Environmental Toxicology

  • Vol 2 (2), 2008

crossmark

Research Article

Heavy metals uptake by vegetables cultivated on urban waste dumpsites: case study of kumasi, ghana, how to cite this article, introduction, materials and methods, results and discussion.

Table 1: Heavy metals concentration in vegetables at Ayigya
**WHO/FAO (1989): Guidelines for heavy metals concentration in leafy vegetables
Table 2: Heavy metals concentrations in vegetables at Buokrom
**WHO/FAO = Guidelines for heavy metals concentration in leafy vegetables
Table 3: Heavy metals concentrations in vegetables at Abrepo
**WHO/FAO = Guidelines for heavy metals concentration in leafy vegetables
Table 4: Heavy metals concentrations in soils and water samples
Table 5: Organic matter contents of soil samples
Table 6: Transfer factors for vegetables at Abrepo
Table 7: Transfer factors for vegetables cultivated at Ayigya
Table 8: Transfer factors for vegetables at Buokrom
Table 9: pH for soil and water samples

CONCLUSIONS

Acknowledgments.

  • Alloway, B.J., 1996. Heavy Metal in Soils. 1st Edn. Halsted Press, John Wiley and Sons Inc., London, pp: 11-37.
  • ATSDR., 1999. Toxicological profile for lead. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, Atlanta, GA., USA.
  • Carlson, C.W., 1976. Land application of waste materials. Soil Conservation Society of America, Ankeny, Iowa, pp: 3-7.
  • Chamberlain, A.C., 1983. Fallout of lead and uptake by crops. J. Atmos. Environ., 17: 693-706. CrossRef
  • Chealteau, B., 1983. Lead and cadmium concentrations in crops from selected markets in Ghana. M.Sc. Thesis, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Ghana.
  • Clesceri, L.S., 1998. Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Waste Water, in Collection and Preservation of Samples and Metals. APHA, AWWA, WEF, Washington, DC.
  • Danso, G., S.C. Fialor and P. Drechsel, 2002. Perceptions of organic agriculture by urban vegetable farmers and consumers in Ghana. Urban Agric. Mag., 6: 23-24.
  • Enwezor, W.O., A.C. Ohiri, E.E. Opubaribo and E.J. Udoh, 1988. A review of soil fertility investigations in South Eastern, Nigeria, Vol. II, F.D.A. Lagos, Nigeria.
  • Harrison, R.M. and M.B. Chirgawi, 1989. The assessment of air and soil as contributors of some trace metals to vegetable plants I. Use of a filtered air growth cabinet. Sci. Total Environ., 83: 13-34. CrossRef
  • Lark, M.W., B. Basnet, R. Kelly, T. Jensen, W. Strong and A. Apan, 2002. Delineation of management zones using multiple crop yield data. J. Environ. Manage., 64: 99-113.
  • Nyangababo, J.T. and J.W. Hamya, 1986. The deposition of lead, cadmium, zinc and copper from motor traffic on Brachiaria enimi and soil along a major Bombo road in Kampala City. Int. J. Environ. Stud., 27: 115-119. CrossRef
  • Perk, V.D.M., 2006. Soil and Water Contamination: From Molecular to Catchment Scale. 1st Edn. Taylor and Francis Group plc. London, pp: 28-32.
  • Purves, D., 1973. Solid wastes and the environment-land. Institute of Public Cleansing 75th Annual Conference Great Britain. Abstracted by C.G. Golueke. Compost. Sci., 14: 4-5.
  • Smith, S.R., 1996. Agricultural Recycling of Sewage Sludge and the Environment. 1st Edn., Biddles Ltd., Guildford, UK.
  • Todd, A.C., J.G. Wetmur, J.M. Moline, J.H. Godbold, S.M. Levin and P.J. Landrigan, 1996. Unraveling the chronic toxicity of lead: An essential priority for environmental health. Environ. Health Perspect, 104: 141-146. Direct Link
  • USA Environmental Protection Agency, 1986. Test methods for evaluating solid waste: Laboratory manual-physical/chemical methods. SW-846, 3rd Edn. Washington DC., USA.
  • Walkley, A. and I.A. Black, 1934. An examination of the degtjareff method for determining soil organic matter, and a proposed modification of the chromic acid titration method. Soil Sci., 37: 29-38. CrossRef Direct Link
  • Ward, N.I., 1995. Environmental Analytical Chemistry. 1st Edn. In: Trace Elements, Blackie Academic and Professional, UK., pp: 320-328.
  • Warner, G.J., 1993. Accumulation of cadmium in crop plants and its consequences to human health. Adv. Agron., 51: 173-212. Direct Link
  • WHO/FAO., 1989. Report of 33rd meeting of Joint WHO/FAO Expect Committee on foods additives. Toxicological evaluation of certain foods additives and contaminants. No. 24, International Program on Chemical Safety, WHO, Geneva.

Related Articles

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

IMAGES

  1. Case Study 2 by on Prezi

    case study 2 ryo

  2. PPT

    case study 2 ryo

  3. Case Study 2

    case study 2 ryo

  4. Ryo Sakazaki

    case study 2 ryo

  5. Dangerous

    case study 2 ryo

  6. The Case For: Ryo Hazuki

    case study 2 ryo

COMMENTS

  1. Solved Case Study 2: Ryo Ryo is a

    Case Study 2: Ryo. Ryo is a 17-year-old boy who has cerebral palsy and severe spastic quadriparesis. Ryo cannot mobilise himself or bear his own weight, and he is required to use a wheelchair. He is not able to verbally communicate with people much - only make certain sounds now and then. Ryo lives in a residential care facility where his ...

  2. Case study 2

    Your answers to this case study CASE STUDY 2: RYO. Ryo is a 17-year-old boy who has cerebral palsy and severe spastic quadriparesis. Ryo cannot mobilise himself or bear his own weight, and he is required to use a wheelchair. He is not able to verbally communicate with people much - only make certain sounds now and then. Ryo lives in a ...

  3. Case Study 2 Ryo Ryo is a 17 year old boy who has cerebral palsy

    Case Study 2: Ryo. Ryo is a 17 - year - old boy who has cerebral palsy and severe spastic quadriparesis. Ryo cannot mobilise himself or bear his own weight, and he is required to use a wheelchair. He is not able to verbally communicate with people much - only make certain sounds now and then.

  4. Chcdis 007 Empowering Disabled People

    Legislation 2: Human rights legislation. Commonwealth legislation. Legislation 1: Racial discrimination act. Legislation 2: Australian human rights commission act (1996) QUESTION 8. Identify the 6 National Standards that apply to disability service providers. ... CASE STUDY 2: RYO.

  5. SOLVED: Texts: Case study 2. Ryo Ryo is a 17-year-old boy who has

    SOLVED: Texts: Case study 2. Ryo Ryo is a 17-year-old boy who has ... ... VIDEO ANSWER:

  6. Case study 2. Ryo Ryo is 17 year-old boy who has cerebral palsy severe

    Case study 2. Ryo Ryo is 17 year-old boy who has cerebral palsy severe spastic Quadriparesis . Ryo cannot mobilise himself or bear his own, weight and he is required to use wheelchair. ... Ryo, a 17 year-old boy, has a severe case of cerebral palsy and exhibits spastic quadriparesis. This condition refers to severe weakening of all four limbs ...

  7. Solved Case study 2. Ryo Ryo is 17 year-old boy who has

    Case study 2. Ryo. Ryo is 17 year-old boy who has cerebral palsy severe spastic Quadriparesis . Ryo cannot mobilise himself or bear his own, weight and he is required to use wheelchair. He is not able to verbally communicate with people much- only make certain sounds now and then. Ryo lives in a residential care facility where his mother ...

  8. Solved 15. Read Case Study 2. What would you do to

    CASE STUDY 2: RYO. Ryo is a 17-year-old boy who has cerebral palsy and severe spastic quadriparesis. Ryo cannot mobilise himself or bear his own weight, and he is required to use a wheelchair. He is not able to verbally communicate with people much - only make certain sounds now and then. Ryo lives in a residential care facility where his ...

  9. Case Study Method: A Step-by-Step Guide for Business Researchers

    A multiple case studies approach was adopted that spanned over 2 years, as it is difficult to investigate all the aspects of a phenomenon in a single case study (Cruzes, Dybå, Runeson, & Höst, 2015). The purpose here is to suggest, help, and guide future research students based on what authors have learned while conducting an in-depth case ...

  10. Has Reducing Ship Emissions Brought Forward Global Warming?

    1 Introduction. In 2020 the International Maritime Organization (IMO) instituted new regulations reducing the maximum allowed sulfur emission per kg of fuel in ships by 80% (IMO, 2019).Upon combustion, sulfur in fuel is released mostly as sulfur dioxide (SO 2), while a small fraction (a few percent) is emitted as primary sulfate aerosol.The gaseous SO 2 is oxidized in the atmosphere to ...

  11. What happened in the Kolkata rape case that triggered doctors' protests

    Laws against sexual violence were made stricter following a rape case in 2012, when a 22-year-old physiotherapy intern was brutally gang-raped and murdered on a bus in Delhi.

  12. A case study of economic development through sanitation interventions

    This study's aim is threefold: first to examine the influence of different dimensions of water and sanitation improvements (e.g., access, quality, reliability) on economic development; second; focus on the potential mediating factors that water and sanitation interventions affect economic development; finally, propose policy implications for ...

  13. 2024 Kolkata rape and murder incident

    Candlelight memorial for the victim. On 9 August 2024, Moumita Debnath, a trainee doctor at RG Kar Medical College in Kolkata, West Bengal, India was raped and murdered.Her dead body was found on campus. The incident has amplified debate about the safety of women and doctors in India, and has sparked significant outrage, nationwide protests, and demands for a thorough investigation.

  14. Researchers awarded $2.8M federal grant to study potential treatment of

    "A major challenge with SIDS research is developing an accurate model that reproduces many of the SIDS abnormal features," said Peter MacFarlane, associate professor and director of neonatology basic research at the School of Medicine, UH Rainbow and lead investigator."One of our model's special features is that it allows us to simulate conditions surrounding many SIDS cases.

  15. Google Data Analytics: Case Study 2 (Using RStudio)

    10. Hello again! This will be another documentation of how I approached the 2nd case study within the Google Data Analytics Professional Certificate on Coursera. As usual, I will be showcasing my ...

  16. Case Study 2: Ryo is a 17-year-old boy who has cerebral palsy and

    Case Study 2: Ryo is a 17-year-old boy who has cerebral palsy and severe spastic quadriparesis. Ryo cannot mobilise himself or bear his own weight, and he is required to use a wheelchair. He is not able to verbally communicate with people much - only make certain sounds now and then. Ryo lives in a residential care facility where his mother ...

  17. Ryo Kanto's Profile

    Find Ryo Kanto's articles, email address, contact information, Twitter and more ... a systematic review of comparative studies with minimum 2-year follow-up. Arthroscopy. 2018;34(5):1699-1707. Google Scholar | Crossref | Medline3. ... Case presentationAn 18-year-old Asian male college soccer player presented with a 3-month history of right knee ...

  18. Case Study 2 (docx)

    Name: HITT 1305 Medical Terminology 3E05 Case Study 2 Due Date: Mohammed Raza Read the two scenarios listed below. Complete the questions below by using your textbook, medical dictionary, or any other reference material you may have. 1. The pathological condition the patient was Rheumatoid arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis is a long-term autoimmune disorder that primarily affects joints and ...

  19. Solved CASE STUDY 2 RYO or who scopy and we cannot mobile

    Question: CASE STUDY 2 RYO or who scopy and we cannot mobile horar onder de Ne mobile who communicate with now and they in conforty where he mother comes to Demi che combining shoeft femur, symptoms of the terapia fracture om the staff any and medical come to view the stoms. The medical che necesario, and he woment por el The chical traumasta ...

  20. Heavy Metals Uptake by Vegetables Cultivated on Urban Waste Dumpsites

    The study was able to successfully show that heavy metals in soils at waste dumpsites eventually end up in the vegetables cultivated on such lands. The four heavy metals, lead, cadmium, copper and zinc, were present at all the three waste dumpsites in measurable quantities. The concentrations of the two most toxic heavy metals, cadmium and lead ...

  21. Solved CASE STUDY 1 EMMA Emma's case study: Emma is 38 years

    CASE STUDY 2: RYO. Ryo is a 17-year-old boy who has cerebral palsy and severe spastic quadriparesis. Ryo cannot mobilise himself or bear his own weight, and he is required to use a wheelchair. He is not able to verbally communicate with people much - only make certain sounds now and then. Ryo lives in a residential care facility where his ...