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Give World Wings To Your Business Model & Win Big Time

You are a single individual or a team of up to five members. You have fire in the belly and a business model in product and services track or social track which you feel is worth showcasing at the national and international level, then this is the right platform for you to give wings to your dreams. The Entrepreneurship Cell IIT Kharagpur has announced its annual global business model competition, Empresario, for 2019, the official qualifier for direct entry to the quarter-finals of the International Business Model Competition (IBMC), co-hosted by Stanford, Harvard and Brigham universities. (Visit www.ecell-iitkgp.org/empresario for more details).

Empresario accepts business ideas in all tracks, including Product & Service, Product Design and Social. Teams need not focus on developing a robust business plan, complete with financials and slick presentations, as in a business plan competition, but on identifying and precisely defining the assumptions of the new venture, testing these assumptions in the field and then pivoting (changing) based on the lessons learnt, marking a new paradigm in entrepreneurship.

According to information received from IIT Kharagpur’s Entrepreneurship Cell, the teams behind the shortlisted entries are provided personalised help in terms of mentorship and the winners also get a much sought after chance to pitch their ideas in front of some of India’s biggest venture capitalists and investors. Empresario participants are mentored and supported by organisations like TiE, NEN (National Entrepreneurship Network), etc. Critical startup services like legal advice, taxation, financial, technical aspects of running a startup, co-working space, HR needs, incubation opportunities, etc. are also provided.

Every business idea entry in each of the fields, including Product & Service, Product Design and Social, gets an equal opportunity to win from the prize money pool of Rs. 25 lakhs and incubation money to the tune of Rs. 2.5 crore. Intially, Empresario had been launched in association with Calcutta Angels, Villgro, Indian Angel Network and many more.

Entrepreneurship Cell, IIT Kharagpur is a student organisation established with the aim of fostering the spirit of entrepreneurship among college students in India. It carries the tag of one of the most successful entrepreneurship organisations in the country with over 60 startups incubated within 10 years of its inception.

For the first round of Empresario, participants are required to fill up a questionnaire asking in brief about their business idea and submit it. This questionnaire can be downloaded from the Entrepreneurship Cell’s website www.ecell-iitkgp.org/empresario. Participants registering now can avail of Early Bird privileges, which include extended mentoring and offline mentoring session during Entrepreneurship Awareness Drive (EAD) 2018.

Some of the past Empresario student startup winners

Swagene – Swagene is transforming healthcare by pioneering personalised medicine. If you are a doctor or patient, you stand to benefit enormously in terms of time, money and precious health !

Janch Healthcare – Janch is a mission to provide personalised, high-quality diagnosis solutions as an as-needed or preventive basis.

Gamezop – It lets you play more than 100 games by installing just one app. It also uses HTML5 to allow users to play offline. It recently raised a seed funding of $350,000.

The Entrepreneurship Cell, IIT Kharagpur conducts its annual flagship event Global Entrepreneurship Summit (GES), the largest collegiate summit in India, in January every year. The final rounds of Empresario 2018-19 will be held during GES’19.

Who Can Participate ?

There is no restriction on any individual to participate. Anyone, from students to working professionals across the world with an idea, a product or service or even an operating startup can participate. 

Renewed Spat Between VC & Intransigent Lobby Triggered

Politics of a brand no less than seen in the country’s Parliament or State assemblies continues to pan out in the governing bodies of the premier government university, Panjab University, Chandigarh, and the Vice President of India, who happens to be Chancellor of the university, is allowing this ugly face of the dance of democracy to play out in full public glare. The cause of the latest flash point in the university Senate and Syndicate is the all important issue of governance reforms. Vice Chancellor Prof Arun Kumar Grover, at loggerheads with a well entrenched and dominant section within the two governing bodies right through the six-year long innings he has had at the helm of the university, is keen on pushing through the recommendations of a governance reforms committee after a quick debate before he bows out in another two weeks’ time. His staunch opponents, who are seen to be clearly the most affected by the recommendations of the committee, on the other hand are determined to frustrate his plans once again. After ensuring on Saturday that the scheduled meeting of the Syndicate did not happen, they were again successful in engineering a disruption in a valid meeting of the Senate with a complete quorum on Sunday.

Even before the agendas could be taken up for discussion, voices began to be raised from among the elected representatives, apparently sympathetic towards the boycotting senators, that in view of the thin attendance (only quorum-completing 16 members were present in a House of 90-plus members) the meeting may be postponed for a couple of days to allow wider and more meaningful discussion. On the other hand, some very senior nominated members, who earlier placed on record their appreciation for the courage and commitment displayed by the Vice Chancellor in steering the university towards new horizons, opposed the suggestion saying that a handful of dissatisfied members could not be allowed to violate the sanctity of the House. All dissent, they asserted, should be placed on record within the House, not outside it in public domain.

Suggestions like adjourning the House till after lunch to allow the boycotters to join the proceedings, and allowing only the most urgent agenda items to be taken up, failed to break the deadlock. At one point the Vice Chancellor, who was chairing the meeting on behalf of the Chancellor, put the issue to vote, offering to abstain himself, but the vote again threw up a fractured verdict. Finally, before concluding the meeting, and promising to report the proceedings to the Chancellor for his advice on further course of action, Prof. Grover extracted an authorisation from the House to deal with most urgent matters from among the agenda items in consultation with the Dean Students’ Welfare and convey the outcomes to all members.

Immediately after the conclusion of Sunday’s meeting, the Vice Chancellor, as announced in the House, is understood to have shot off a mail to the Vice President of India, who is the chairperson of the university Senate, seeking an urgent appointment in the context of the proceedings of the House.

Prof. Grover is clearly miffed at the public stand taken by the dominant section in the Syndicate and Senate that they will not attend any meeting held under his chairmanship. As he has showed on previous occasions, he appears to be equally determined not to allow the opposing “band of senators and syndics” to hold him to ransom with their “disruptive agenda against him”.

The ball is once again in the court of the Chancellor to take a call in the overall interests of the university. Will he be obliged to give the intransigent members of the governing bodies one more chance to discharge their responsibilities before the current Vice Chancellor demits charge, or will he choose to soft pedal the issue remains to be seen.

Knee-jerk Reactions Won’t Work, Sincerity Of Action Will

The grim war against rampant drug abuse in Punjab can be equated to the one against the equally ugly phenomenon of stone-pelting in Kashmir. In both, knee-jerk reactions of the establishment have failed to deliver. The might of the state and its various agencies by itself has proved to be largely ineffective. The reasons are not far to seek. Something which has been allowed to fester for years and decades will not just go away with the use of force alone. Delving deep into the psychology of the perpetrators and the pawns alike will perhaps lead to framing of policies that are better equipped to judge where to apply the balm and where to use the surgical blade. Even brilliant and experienced medical brains have to delve deep into their study and investigations before deciding whether to treat a malignant tumour with chemotherapy or to remove it altogether.

Under intense pressure of public perception over the spate of recent drug abuse related deaths across the state, the Capt. Amarinder Singh led state cabinet on Monday may have just uncorked another knee-jerk reaction in haste. By recommending to the Centre to declare death penalty for drug peddlers and smugglers as a deterrent to the heinous crime, it is seeking to add one more crime to the long list of death penalty crimes, a recent addition to which was the central ordinance for condemning rapists of girls below 12 years to death, which has been adopted by the state government. This leads one to wonder whether capital punishment is the only answer to all heinous crimes happening with distressing frequency across the country. This way we may be headed towards a situation where death penalty will be among the most trending judgements in the country.

Photo By : Life In Chandigarh

Punjab cabinet at ‘half-mast’

The state cabinet, before the start of its meeting on Monday, is understood to have observed silence for the drug abuse deaths, besides the killings of Indians in a suicide attack in Afghanistan and farmers’ suicides. Were members of the state cabinet hanging their heads in respect, or in shame for the failure of the state government in tackling drug abuse? Till recently the state government was patting its back for effectively tackling drug abuse by belting out figures of seizures and arrests. Now while taking a decision to recommend death penalty, the state government has resorted to the argument that drug peddling and smuggling was destroying the youth of Punjab along with many other parts of the country, a clear admission that things are not in control.

Senior Ministers Defensive

Even senior ministers in the state appear to be defensive and apologetic about the situation. It was officially admitted by the state government that outspoken Minister for Local Government Navjot Singh Sidhu “expressed concern at the public perception that the (state) government had not succeeded in eliminating the drug menace. He also lamented the reported instances of involvement of police personnel in drug menace and urged strict action against the guilty cops.”

Failed To Break Nexus

Despite creating a special task force (STF) under an ADGP rank officer, back from deputation with the central government, immediately on taking over power in the state in line with his election promise of wiping out substance abuse menace from the state, Capt. Amarinder Singh’s government appears to have failed to break the well entrenched nexus between drug network and black sheep among politicians of all hues, bureaucrats and the police force, which is common knowledge. The STF, which for nearly a year was functioning independently and its chief reporting directly to the Chief Minister, was later, integrated into the state police force as the top police brass squabbled over issues of chain of command within the uniformed force.

Human Factor Largely Ignored

In this cat and mouse game, focussed on cutting off supply lines of drugs, the human factor has apparently not been given the kind of deep focus and sincere action it deserves. It is only now, when the issue of government failure has again erupted and taken centre stage, elements within the government are talking about starting a mass movement by involving parents and the community at large and treating the addicts with sensitivity while protecting their dignity and identity.

Stop Bragging

The state government would be well advised to stop reeling out figures to show success and get down to creating a massive network of infrastructure and trained doctors, counsellors, volunteers and public opinion makers, including celebrities, and generating imaginative songs, skits, posters and other publicity materials through public partnership and open competitions to show its real intent to make a serious and sincere attempt to integrate the substance abuse victims into the mainstream.

Coin a new dignified term while addressing substance abuse victims. Stop calling them drug addicts ! Rename Drug De-addiction Centres.

Highlights Of Monday’s Deliberations

1. A formal recommendation for death penalty to drug peddlers and smugglers to be sent to the central government.

2. Special Working Group to be constituted under the chairmanship of Additional Chief Secretary (Home) NS Kalsi to review and monitor, on a day-to-day basis, action being taken to check and control drug abuse. The working group will have ACS (Health) Satish Chandra, DGP (Intelligence) Dinkar Gupta, ADGP (Law & Order) Ishwar Singh and ADGP (STF) HS Sidhu as members.

3. Cabinet sub-committee formed under the chairmanship of the Chief Minister, with Health & Family Welfare Minister Brahm Mohindra and Social Security Minister Aruna Chaudhary as its members. It will meet once every week. The Special Working Group to report directly to the cabinet sub-committee.

4. State DGP Suresh Arora directed by the Chief Minister to intensify the police crackdown. No complacency to be tolerated.

5. STF chief suggests registration of cases in all recent incidents of substance abuse deaths with a view to identify and mitigate the risk factors, including possible supply of spurious drugs and mixing of drugs with other death-causing substances. Suggests intensified training of Drug Awareness Prevention Officers (DAPOs) to help substance abuse victims cope with social stigma.

6. ACS (Home) NS Kalsi calls for holistic strategy involving Enforcement Wing and Drug De-addiction & Rehabilitation Centres. Suggests state DGP take to task district SSPs found not performing up to the mark in the fight against substance abuse and pen down adverse remarks in their ACRs.

7. DGP Suresh Arora defends solid work put in by state police. Cites figures to show arrests and seizures have registered a sharp increase since the new government took charge of the state. Claims seizures of heroin have subsequently declined due to effective action of police, STF, and various central agencies and increased deployment of BSF with upgraded surveillance technology and other infrastructure on the international borders. Suggests it is possible that facing a shortage, substance abuse victims may be resorting to consumption of adulterated drugs, leading to deaths. However, admits real cause of deaths could be ascertained only after chemical analysis.   

8. Health Minister Brahm Mohindra informs meeting that 81 Patient Opioid Assisted Treatment (OOAT) centres are currently functioning effectively in the state and so far 8,000 youth had been successfully treated in these. Affirms identities of substance abuse victims and their families have been strictly kept confidential to save them from social stigma.

9. Water Supply & Sanitation Minister Razia Sultana suggests taking parents into confidence to facilitate treatment and rehabilitation of substance abuse victims.

10. Housing & Urban Development Minister Tript Rajinder Singh Bajwa underlines need for motivating substance abuse victims to get treatment at drug de-addiction centres.

11. Senior Advisor to the Chief Minister Lt. Gen. (retd.) TS Shergill opines Guardians of Governance (GoG) Programme, under which an army of ex-servicemen have been deployed at the grassroots level in Punjab to monitor implementation of central and state government welfare schemes, could play a vanguard role in sensitising youth on the issue of substance abuse. Calls for generating a grassroots level movement to involve people in the fight against drugs.

12. Advocate General Atul Nanda points out NDPS Act is a very sensitive and specialised legislation, and, as a corrective measure, suggests creation of a special cadre of at least 15 well-trained prosecutors to secure convictions of drug offenders in an effective manner.

13. Secretary School Education Krishan Kumar informs meeting about special chapters being included in Physical Education text books to sensitise students from class VI onwards about drugs and their ill-effects. Further says two dedicated teachers have been deputed in each High and Senior Secondary School to create awareness about substance abuse and its adverse effects on mental and physical health.

Pleasure Of Giving Succour To Rickshaw Pullers In Sweltering Heat

It was an occasion coinciding with the beginning of the Rotary year. And, what better way to celebrate than help give succour to the profusely sweating men pulling the rickshaws on city roads in this sweltering heat. Rotary Club of Chandigarh on Sunday made a good choice while launching ‘Rotary Rahat Programme’, presenting two dozen-odd rickshaw pullers outside Aroma Hotel in Sector 22 a set of insulated water bottle and a towel each. Later, Rotary Club of Chandigarh volunteers fanned out in different directions of the city and a couple of adjoining villages to distribute the sets to other rickshaw pullers.

The pleasure of giving was seen to be believed as the first rickshaw puller, a young man from Uttar Pradesh, took out the presented water bottle from its insulation cover and took a hearty gulp of the refreshing cold water. Senior Superintendent of Police (Traffic & Security) of Chandigarh Police Shashank Anand and young volunteers from Rotary Club of Chandigarh presented the sets to the beneficiaries.

Photos By : Life In Chandigarh

Club President AP Singh told lifeinchandigarh.com that initially 500 sets will be distributed among rickshaw pullers outside hospitals, inter-state bus stands, Railway station, and important road junctions in the city, besides Dhanas and Saketri villages.

He said Rotary Clubs were focussed on service of the community and they continue to provide assistance to the poor and the needy in several ways, which include organising health camps in the slum areas. “This idea of giving water bottles and towels to rickshaw-pullers in the height of summers came from veteran Rotarian Kanwal Bedi, and what better day to start the programme than on the first day of the Rotary year,” Singh added.

Doctors Admit Rift With Patients, Show Serious Intent To Bridge Gap

When an invitation came from Dr. Neeraj Kumar, President of the Chandigarh Chapter of Indian Medical Association, for a symposium on “How to Improve Doctor-Patient Relationship” and a blood donation camp to coincide with World Doctors’ Day on Sunday, I was caught in two minds, whether or not to go for such a programme, which in common knowledge is a sham affair. Finding nothing much on my hands on a lazy Sunday, I finally convinced myself to go anyway, if only to touch base with doctor friends I had not met for a long time. Sitting through to the end of the nearly three hours of focussed discussions, which were interspersed with moments of heated dissent from veteran doctors and general public alike sitting in the audience, I was pleasantly surprised to witness the medical fraternity seriously acknowledging the disconnect with the patients and showing willingness to make amends to win back their faith and confidence in the noble profession that once was, and perhaps still deserves to be.

First up, both the keynote speakers, and more than half a dozen panellists, were top notch and from varied backgrounds. Moreover, they appeared to have come prepared with a willingness to listen to dissent. And, dissent the panellists, who included senior private and government sector doctors, an internationally recognised consumer advocacy expert, a senior journalist and a senior lawyer, received in fair measure from veteran doctors and general public in the audience, who sought to break protocol to get themselves heard from the  patients’ perspective.

Photos By : Life In Chandigarh

The panellists

It was left to chief guest Justice Mahesh Grover, Judge of the Punjab & Haryana High Court, to cool tempers as he stood to give his straight-from-the-heart address, which received rapt attention from one and all in the audience. Interspersing his thoughts with personal experiences to make his point, he did not mince words in hitting out at the government, which in his personal view, had blundered in bringing the medical field under the ambit of the Consumer Protection Act. At the same time showing a mirror to the medical fraternity, he urged them to get their act together and mercilessly weed out the black sheep who had brought disrespect to the noble profession in the eyes of the general public.

Pointing out that the topic chosen by the organisers for the symposium itself revealed the deep realisation of failing which has crept into the medical profession, Justice Grover, said at the same time it also showed willingness on the part of the medical fraternity to introspect, which is a good thing as constant introspection is the need of the hour as it invariably leads to good outcomes. In a lighter vein, he equated the situation to a husband making concerted efforts to win back the trust and confidence of his wife which he has lost because of his conduct.

He opined that this breach of trust between doctors and patients has not happened overnight, but over a long period of time. “The success of any profession lies in its public perception. If the medical profession feels it has lost the perception war, it needs to introspect as to the causes, and take early corrective measures.”

Remembering old times, he said, “Those days most of the clinical tests we have now were not available to the medical profession, and doctors largely relied on a patient’s examination and listening patiently to what he has to say regarding his ailment. It did wonders in creating trust with the patient.”

Justice Mahesh Grover

Suggesting that doctors in the modern age need to learn to open channels of communication with the patients, he said, “I am sure if they are able to do this, the larger part of the problem will resolve by itself. The patient knows best what he is going through, and after giving him a patient hearing a doctor knows best what his affliction is and what the line of actions needs to be. The lesser time devoted by a doctor in listening to a patient, and depending instead on clinical investigations, gives an impression to a patient that he is being made a guinea pig, that he is being experimented upon. In such a scenario, when a patient is required to spend a substantial amount of money on investigations he takes it as commercialisation of healthcare.”

Use Kind Words

Emphasising the importance of using kind words from both sides, which he felt made all the difference in building a strong bond of confidence and trust between a doctor and a patient, he quoted two examples from his own experiences to press home the point.

The first was of a former High Court Judge afflicted with a brain tumour and needing major life-threatening surgery telling his doctor, ‘your competence and my confidence will help us pull through safely.’  

The second example he gave was of his own concern for the safety of his new born son, who had a condition requiring surgery, and after the surgery was admitted to the neonatal ICU. “I was spending hours to be with my child out of concern for his safety. Seeing this, one day the attending doctor asked me why I am so worried when the child is being looked after well by the hospital staff. He reassured me that my son will be all right since he is in good hands and God is with him. Those words of comfort gave me intense confidence that my son will weather the tide. That empathy and compassion coming from the doctor did the trick.”

Patient Coming In Distress

Justice Grover signed off saying that the doctors must realise that a patient coming to them is not his normal self, but is in distress. In this condition, he needs a doctor’s attention, care and concern more than anything else, to assure him that he need not worry and will be all right.”

Earlier, in their keynote addresses Bejon Misra, international expert on consumer advocacy and founding board member of New Delhi-based ‘Patient Safety And Access Initiative of India Foundation’, and Dr. SK Jindal, former HoD, Deptt. Of Pulmonology, PGI, also spelled out steps that can be taken to rebuilt the fractured trust between the doctors’ community and the general public. Stressing the need for doctors’ to show greater compassion and empathy towards the patients, they also asserted that the interests of doctors should equally be safeguarded and they should not be prima facie held guilty on the basis of a complaint and then be expected to prove themselves not guilty. The onus of proving charges in a complaint should be on the complainant and concerned authorities in competent courts, they added.

The Panellists

Bijon Misra

The panellists included besides Bijon Misra, and Dr. SK Jindal, senior journalist Vipin Pubby, Dr Ashok Attri, HoD, Surgery & Emergency, GMCH-32, senior lawyer Alka Sarin, Dr. Yash Bala, senior gynaecologist, and Dr. Gurbir Singh, Regional Medical Director, North & East, Fortis Healthcare. The police remained unrepresented since a senior officer of the Chandigarh Police scheduled to join the panel failed to turn up. The panellists deliberated on various issues being raised in public domain like unnecessary surgeries, investigations and admissions, media’s role in improving doctor-patient relationship, privatisation of healthcare and profitability, commissions/cuts paid to doctors and expensive medicines being prescribed by doctors with an ulterior motive.

In the blood donation camp organised on the occasion, 80-odd volunteers donated blood.

First Of Its Kind Patient Support Group In City

Before making an abrupt exit in the middle of the deliberations to catch a scheduled flight, Bejon Misra, who is also founder at ‘Partnership For Safe Medicines’ and ‘Consumer Online Foundation’, announced a major initiative, in association with IMA Chandigarh, for the city to bridge the gap between doctors and patients, which he claimed would be the first of its kind in the country. It will be a patient counselling centre, to be initially housed in the IMA House in Sector 35-B, Chandigarh, where patients can come with their issues related to healthcare services, including grievances against doctors and hospitals, in Chandigarh.     

“It has been my dream project for the last 35 years. This will be the first time in the country that a patient support group in association with leading doctors’ organisation will start this type of service,” he asserted.

When Married Women Were Made To Feel Like Queens

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To be bestowed the honour of a queen for a married woman is no less than a dream come true, but to be crowned at a glorious 60-plus age is like going over the moon. This is what 16 women from all walks of life experienced as they displayed grace, beauty, poise and glamour on the ramp while participating in three different age categories in the finale of the first ever Mrs India Punjab-2018 pageant, part of the larger Mrs India pageant, at the Ramada Plaza Chandigarh on June 25 night. The ‘youngest’ among the ladies of substance had crossed the 68 mark, and dazzled the indulgent audience like none else.

A helicopter pilot of the Indian Air Force, flying Cheetahs and Chetaks, Squadron Leader Garima Dixit ran away with the Mrs India Punjab-2018 winner’s title in the 18-40 years age group. The Classic Mrs India Punjab-2018 (age group 40-60) crown was worn by Sandhya Kulkarni, a multi-faceted personality – educationist, avid mountain trekker, painter and poet. The wiry Rashmi Sabharwal, winner of the Super Classic (60-plus) Mrs India Punjab-2018 title, is again a multi-tasker – an IELTS and English language trainer, certified Reiki practitioner and accomplished dance trainer, who also runs a fashion jewellery store.

Photos By : Life In Chandigarh

The stately Super Classic lady winners

Rashmi, in fact, gave a scintillating display of her dancing skills in the company of her equally lithe husband Col. (retd.) Sabharwal. The Cuban origin ‘cha-cha-cha’ dance to a Latin American tune had the audience at the edge of their seats.

Garima Dixit

First up, the pageant, an attempt to bring the Mrs India contest closer to the aspiring married women from Punjab, Chandigarh and around, was impressive, though it left scope for improvement. Organised and managed by Mrs India Punjab Director Jyoti Rupaal, herself a sub-title holder of Mrs Asia International Popularity Queen 2017 in China, the pageant attracted an overwhelmingly large number of applicants and contestants from Defence background, with Jyoti herself being from an Army family. Wider outreach in the coming editions could be an answer to larger and more broad-based participation.

Pooja Sharda

The pageant was organised under the patronage of Mrs India Pageants & Productions Pvt. Ltd., one and only National pageant for Indian married women, and official host for Mrs Tourism International, Mrs Asia International and Mrs Planet.

Jyoti Rupaal told lifeinchandigarh.com that they received 82 applications, out of which 39 contestants were selected for auditions, and further 16 were shortlisted for the finale. Since it was the first state level pageant, the Mrs India head office fully supported the Mrs India Punjab-2018 pageant, both financially and otherwise, she added.

Sucheta Bagri being crowned by Jyoti Rupaal (left) and Deepali Phadnis 

In the finale, the participants in all three categories first participated in a traditional dress round, followed by an introduction round. The talent round saw all but one of the finalists displaying their dancing skills to good effect, and a lone finalist winning hearts with a sweet song. The evening gown round was the most elegant of all the rounds.   

The concluding question-answer round, in which all finalists were asked to pen down in three minutes, and later read out their views on what they would do to empower women who were not as blessed as they were, saw an across-the-board dip in their performances.  

The Classic winners

Besides Jyoti Rupaal, the others on the judges’ panel were Chennai-based Deepali Phadnis, Managing Director of Mrs India Pageants & Productions Pvt. Ltd. and herself a Mrs Asia International title winner in 2012, Punjabi films producer-actor Manpreet Singh ‘Tony’ Popli and AKSS Medi Aesthetic & Cosmetology Clinic promoter Dr Sonia Oberoi.

The winners

Mrs India Punjab-2018 (18-40 years)

Winner : Squadron Leader Garima Dixit

1st Runner-up : Pooja Sharda

2nd Runner-up : Sucheta Bagri

Classic Mrs India Punjab-2018 (40-60 years)

Winner : Sandhya Kulkarni

1st Runner-up : Leena Sharma

2nd Runner-up : Geeta Dhull

Super Classic Mrs Indai Punjab-2018 (60-plus years)

Winner : Rashmi Sabharwal

1st Runner-up : Jyoti Dogra

2nd Runner-up : Kanwaljit Kaur Bains

Sub-titles

Mrs Beautiful Smile : Pallavi Airy

Mrs Photogenic : Rashmi Singh

Mrs Personality : Gurpreet Gill

Mrs Congeniality : Parminder Matharu

Mrs Graceful : Sarabjit Kaur

Mrs Talented : Ashi Parashar

Best Traditional Costume : Neelam Khatter

Mrs Vivacious : Pooja Sharda

There was also a special surprise award for Best Supporting Husband (for treating his wife like a queen 24X7 right through the contest), and it went to Col. Tejinder Singh.

All went home happy !! Overall, a well planned and designed event, executed with finesse !! A job well done, first up !!

‘Advanced Inorganics In Right Doses Can Sustain Organic Farming’

Organic farming cannot succeed in isolation, especially in a country of India’s size and population, with tremendous pressure on increasing productivity of crops to feed the teeming millions. It can only be sustained with judicious use of new generation agrochemicals, which require less dosage, ensure greater productivity and are more environmental friendly. Expressing these views, Rajesh Aggarwal, Managing Director of India’s leading agrochemicals company Insecticides India Ltd. (IIL), while announcing the launch of three new products – Encounter, Sophia and Aikido – in the Punjab market at a media conference in Chandigarh on Thursday, said while practising organic farming it would be foolhardy to assume that all diseases which will afflict the crops can be fought without the use of agrochemicals.

Comparing the consumption of agrochemicals in India with some of the advanced countries, Aggarwal asserted that it is a myth that India was among the highest consumers of these chemicals in the world. “The sale of agrochemicals in India is worth a mere 3 billion dollars compared to the worldwide figure of 66 billion dollars. The reason is Indian farmers are slow on the uptake of mode technologies, and the results can be seen in very low levels of productivity as compared to counties like USA and Brazil, where the consumption patte of agrochemicals is much higher,” he informed.

Photo By : Life In Chandigarh

“At IIL, it is our continuous endeavour to develop the latest crop protection products for the benefit of farmers which are economically within their reach. All three new products, developed either in our in-house R&D centres or in technical collaboration with Nihon Nohyaku, Japan, are based on the latest technology and safe formulations and will find wide applicability,” Aggarwal claimed.

IIL is also working big time with farmers in Punjab to educate them not only about the right dosages of pesticides and fungicides and spraying techniques to be used, but also advising them on use of seeds and fertilisers to achieve best results and to cut down on wastages. Sharing details regarding this farmers’ outreach programme of the company, General Manager Sanjay Vats said last year the company through a strong network of its agri experts spread across the state could reach out to 20,000 farmers by organising 60 mega farmers’ meets, 350 spot meetings and 600 ‘nukkad’ meetings.

Asked about the size of the agrochemicals market in Punjab, Aggarwal said “In quantity terms, the use of agrochemicals is not increasing because advanced technologies require lesser dosage. But, in value terms, it is increasing and it stands at an estimated Rs. 1700-1800 crore. The overall Indian market for agrochemicals is of the order of Rs. 17,000-18,000 crore, he added.

Sharing financials of the company, Aggarwal claimed that in 2017-18 its top line stood at Rs. 1109.23 crore. “Last 3-4 years have been difficult years and we could manage only a single digit growth. But, we are hopeful of clocking 15 percent continuous growth from this year.  Last year, IIL’s exports were of the order of Rs. 35 crore, which we have targeted to double this year.” 

Govt. Hospitals On Fast Track In Punjab Could Signal Relief For PGI

At long last, the overburdened prestigious regional super speciality government institute for medical education and research, PGI Chandigarh, may be able to derive some comfort from moves afoot in cash-strapped Punjab to give a facelift to its health services. In a meeting to review functioning of the Medical Education and Research Department, on Thursday, Chief Minister Capt. Amarinder Singh cracked the whip for expediting work on upgrading the Mohali Government Hospital to a Medical College and Hospital by adding 100 more beds to the existing strength of 200, completing basic infrastructure for early construction of AIIMS Bathinda by the Centre, opening of PGI satellite centre at Ferozepur, restoring the glory of the Patiala Medical College and Hospital with infusion of more funds, and speedy planning for opening two new medical college and hospitals at Sangrur and Gurdaspur or Pathankot.

Aiming to come down heavily on unprofessional private medical colleges operating in the state, the Chief Minister asked the Vice Chancellor of Baba Farid University of Health Sciences (BFUHS) Dr. Raj Bahadur to ensure that students were not duped by these institutions and that they followed all Medical Council of India norms. The university should not hesitate in taking stern action against erring institutions by closing down courses or shutting down the institutions altogether, if needed, he asserted.

Photo By : Life In Chandigarh

Additional Chief Secretary Health Satish Chandra was instructed to immediately take up with the Central Government the issue of approval for a satellite centre of PGI Chandigarh at Ferozepur, for which a 25-acre plot had already been identified at Mallwal Kadim village near Wazidpur.

Similarly, Capt. Amarinder Singh sought the department’s greater indulgence in getting the central government to complete the construction of AIIMS Bathinda within the stipulated time-frame. The Finance Department was asked for early release of funds for completion of Punjab’s commitment towards basic infrastructure works associated with the project, like a 66 KV sub-station, shifting of power lines, water channel, approach road, etc.

Seeking a comprehensive plan for up-gradation of infrastructure and faculty to restore the glorious legacy of the Patiala Medical College and Hospital, the Chief Minister directed the Finance Department for immediate release of Rs. 65.95 crore towards execution of new works in the institution, including a multi-level parking, renovation and repair of TB Hospital and new ambulances. The meeting was informed that funds had already been released for installing sewerage treatment plants and repair of sewage lines.

Capt. Amarinder Singh emphasised on the Medical Education and Research Department to regularly convene meetings of the departmental promotion committees to ensure seamless time-bound promotions of the medical faculty.

Health Minister Brahm Mohindra, Finance Minister Manpreet Singh Badal, Principal Secretary to the Chief Minister Tejveer Singh, Finance Secretary Anirudh Tewari, Director Medical Education and Research Dr. Avinash Kumar, OSD Medical Services to the Chief Minister Dr. Girish Sahni and Principal of Patiala Government Medical College and Hospital Dr. B.S. Sidhu were among others who participated in the meeting.

Real Time Online Data Analysis Will Help Improve Patient Safety

With on an average 10,000-plus OPD patients visiting the prestigious PGI Chandigarh daily, and more than 200 surgeries being performed in its 50-odd operation theatres every day, the behemoth has so far been maintaining the astronomical amount of vital data of patients manually, leaving little scope of its retrieval for long term follow up care of patients, medico legal purposes and medical studies and research. On Tuesday, PGI, after more than two years of painstaking work, began a process of rolling out a first of its kind information management system (IMS) among all government hospitals of its scale in the country, which will generate second to second online data real time to be stored in the premier institution’s own servers.

As PGI Director Prof. Jagat Ram formally launched the highly advanced IMS, initially to be available to the Anaesthesia Department in four operation theatres in the Advanced Cardiac Centre, it heralded the opening of a new chapter of public-private partnership in the history of the medical institute. For the entire intricate software part of the system, the PGI owes its thanks to the benevolence of Indian IT giant Infosys Ltd., which custom built the open source software (not requiring any licenses) for the PGI free of cost, deploying a full time team of four to five professionals for a good 18 months for the purpose.      

The PGI Director informed that the facility of IMS will gradually be extended to all 50 OTs, ICUs, other advanced centres and to the main Nehru Hospital as and when funds are released for purchasing more hardware to run the system. It will also be integrated with the Hospital Information System (HIS), which is already operational but so far is being put to limited use, he added.

A brainchild of Prof. GD Puri, Head, Department of Anaesthesia & Intensive Care, the first phase of the IMS developed by Infosys Ltd. has the capability to interface and aggregate data from all equipments linked to a patient in an operation theatre like anaesthesia machine, infusion pumps, vital sign monitor and ventilator, etc. and to access a patient’s data real time from distant locations.

Prof. Puri told media persons that besides making the data collection paperless, IMS will lead to increased accuracy and completeness of clinical documentation, robust real time second to second data recording and increased operational efficiency of the clinicians / anaesthesiologists. From the research perspective, it offers opportunities for big data analysis and predicting critical events in advance so that necessary pre-emptive actions can be taken for patient safety, he added.

Describing the development as a big step towards PGI forging a fruitful partnership with private industry for the good of society, PGI Dean Academics Prof Rajesh Kumar however said the ultimate test of the system will be to demonstrate that its deployment has lead to improvement in patient outcomes. Acknowledging that IMS will infuse transparency in the functioning of the institute, he also advocated deployment of IT in other critical areas like teaching and research.

Speaking on the occasion, Sunil Jose, Associate VP and Delivery Head, Engineering Services, Infosys Ltd., said “We have developed this open source customised software for PGI free of cost to build a relationship with the premier health institute of the country.” Giving an overview of Infosys Medical Devices Practice worldwide, he said Infosys is looking forward to exploring more opportunities for further collaboration with PGI on a case to case basis.

Taking A Cue From Centre, Punjab To Disinvest 3 Large PSUs

Desperate to come out of the financial crisis in the state and get moving to urgently generate funds for capital expenditure and infrastructure development, social welfare schemes and improving performance of Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) by instilling professional and corporate business ethics, the Capt. Amarinder Singh Government in Punjab has initiated the process for disinvestment of three of the ailing large PSUs.

The decision to disinvest the now loss-making, but once robust Punjab Communications Limited (Puncom), Punjab Financial Corporation (PFC) and Punjab State Industrial Development Corporation (PSIDC) was taken by the state cabinet on Wednesday, based on the recommendations of the Punjab Governance Reforms and Ethics Commission (PGREC).

The process of disinvestment of these PSUs to be followed would be recommended by a Core Group of Officers, to be set up under the chairmanship of the Chief Secretary, and assisted by a Transaction Adviser. The report of the Core Group would be submitted to the Council of Ministers for a final decision. Other members of the Core Group would be Principal Secretary Finance, Principal Secretary to the Chief Minister, Administrative Secretary of the concerned department and Managing Directors of the concerned PSUs. Director Public Enterprises and Disinvestment would be its Member/Convenor.

In taking the decision to disinvest, the cabinet took note that the State earned only Rs. 4.90 crore as dividend in 2017-18 from its 50-odd PSUs, while the state resources locked up in these PSUs amounted to a staggering Rs 7614 crore. The total amount of outstanding government loans of these PSUs is a whopping around Rs 25,393 crore and the unpaid loan against Government guarantee stood at Rs. 18,312 crore approximately as on March 31, 2018 (provisional).

The cabinet was influenced by the Central Government collecting around Rs. 1 lakh crore from the strategic and non-strategic disinvestment of Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs) in 2017-18, taking advantage of the market conditions.