Abhay and Rani Bang

Abhay and Rani Bang

Abhay and Rani Bang
Born Wardha and Chandrapur, Maharashtra, India
Residence SEARCH, Gadchiroli, Maharashtra, India
Nationality Indian
Alma mater Nagpur University (MBBS, MD)
Johns Hopkins University, USA (M.P.H.)
Occupation Social Activists
Known for Social Work, Community Health, Research with the people, De-Addiction, Home Based Newborn Care
Children 2
Awards
  • Maharashtra Bhushan Award (2003)
  • The Global Health Heroes by TIME Magazine (2005)
  • MacArthur Foundation International Award (2006)
  • Society of Scholars, Johns Hopkins University, USA (2013)
  • National Award for Women's Development through Application of Science & Technology (2008)
  • Jamnalal Bajaj Award (2006)
  • Inaugural Distinguished Alumni Award, Department of International Health, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, USA (2013)
  • National Award of the Indian Council of Medical Research for Outstanding Research in Community Medicine

Abhay Bang and Rani Bang are Indian social activists, and researchers working in the field of community health in Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra, India. They have revolutionized healthcare for the poorest people in India and have overseen a programme that has substantially reduced infant mortality rates in one of the most poverty-stricken areas in the world. The World Health Organisation (WHO) and UNICEF have endorsed their approach to treating newborn babies and the programme is currently being rolled out across India and in parts of Africa.[1] The Bangs founded the 'Society For Education, Action and Research in Community Health' (SEARCH)[2] (S) – a non-profit organisation, which is involved in rural health service and research. The couple is the winner of the prestigious Maharashtra Bhushan Award. They have published articles in The Lancet, one of the world's most prestigious medical journals.[3] Sanjay Gandhi Postgraduate Institute of Medical Sciences, Lucknow has conferred honorary doctorates on Abhay and Rani Bang.[4] SNDT Women's University, Mumbai has also awarded Honoris Causa to Rani Bang.[5] The Lancet has honoured the couple as 'the pioneers of health care in rural India'.[6] Abhay and Rani Bang are the first recipients of the Distinguished Alumni Award from the Department of International Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. They were also inducted into the Johns Hopkins Society of Scholars. The Bangs are honoured for their leadership in community-based health care that is now helping to save the lives of millions of the most vulnerable newborns and children. During their careers, the Bangs have helped foster a renaissance in community-based primary health care.[7] In 2016, Johns Hopkins University conferred the Distinguished Alumni Award upon them.[8]

Personal life and background

Abhay Bang was born at Wardha, Maharashtra, India in 1950 to Thakurdas Bang and Suman Bang who were followers of the Sarvodaya movement inspired by Gandhian thoughts. His father, Thakurdas Bang, a young economist, went to Mahatma Gandhi to seek his blessings while he was about to go to US to do his doctoral studies. Gandhiji looked at him for few seconds and said – "Young man, if you want to study economics, go to the villages of India"[9] Thakurdas cancelled his plans to go to US and remained in India to study Economics of Indian villages.

Abhay spent his childhood in Gandhi's Sevagram Ashram at Wardha with Mahatma Gandhi's foremost disciple Acharya Vinoba Bhave. Until ninth standard he studied in a school which followed the tenets of Nai Taleem (a method of practical hands-on Education) as propagated by Gandhiji.[10]

When Abhay was 13-years-old, he and his elder brother Ashok, who was 16 years old, would have discussions on what they should do with their lives. Ashok Bang decided to work for issues related to farming and Abhay decided to work for the health of villagers.[1][11][12]

Rani Bang (formerly Rani Chari) was born in Chandrapur. She belonged to a family with strong commitment both to medical service and, in her grandparents' generation, to public service.[13] Abhay and Rani completed their graduation and post graduation in medical studies from Nagpur University. When he Abhay was studying for final year exam of MBBS at Nagpur, he read an incident about Gandhi where Gandhi was very careful regarding use of natural resources. After reading the incident Abhay decided to use resources carefully. He switched off the fan in his room. He thought that he should be able to live without fan. He did not use the fan for next five years during his education even in the heat of Nagpur.[11] Abhay and Rani married in 1977. Both of them have secured MPH (Masters in Public Health) from Johns Hopkins University. Anand Bang is their elder son and Amrut Bang is their younger son.

Abhay and Rani Bang, along with their younger son Amrut

Education

Abhay and Rani Bang completed their MBBS from Government Medical College, Nagpur, Maharashtra in 1972. Abhay Bang was first in the University in MBBS and had three gold medals. Abhay Bang did his MD in Medicine (with a first position in the University) while Rani Bang did her MD in Obstetrics and Gynaecology (with a first position in the University and gold medal). They helped organise and lead a national group of medical professionals concerned with health-care quality and delivery.[14] After their medical studies, the couple moved to Wardha and co-founded Chetna Vikas – a non-profit organization. While working in villages of Wardha district, Abhay Bang published a study challenging the minimum wages fixed for agriculture labour in Maharashtra, forcing the government to raise the minimum wages.[15] This strengthened their belief in the power of research as a way of solving social problems. They realized the need for further studies in public health to address larger health-care issues. Both of them completed Masters in Public Health from Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, America in 1984. The couple had decided to follow Gandhian principles and to work with the poor and thus immediately returned to India after finishing their masters.[16]

Scientific Publications

Abhay and Rani Bang have several research publications in various prestigious medical journals including The Lancet, Journal of Perinatology, Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, British Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, PLOS One, PLOS Medicine, International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, Indian Pediatrics, Indian Journal of Community Medicine, Archives of Disease in Childhood, Bulletin of WHO, Stroke, World Journal of Surgery, International Journal of Epidemiology. Few of them are as follows.

  1. Effect of home-based neonatal care and management of sepsis on neonatal mortality: field trial in rural India – The Lancet
  2. Reduction in pneumonia mortality and total childhood mortality by means of community-based intervention trial in Gadchiroli, India – The Lancet
  3. High prevalence of gynaecological diseases in rural Indian women. - The Lancet
  4. Breath counter for diagnosis of childhood pneumonia - The Lancet
  5. WCH RATHER THAN MCH - The Lancet
  6. Diagnosis of causes of childhood deaths in developing countries by verbal autopsy: suggested criteria. The SEARCH Team. - Bulletin of WHO
  7. Management of childhood pneumonia by traditional birth attendants. The SEARCH Team. - Bulletin of WHO
  8. Burden of Morbidities and the Unmet Need for Health Care in Rural Neonates – A Prospective Observational Study in Gadchiroli, India - Indian Pediatrics
  9. Stroke Is the Leading Cause of Death in Rural Gadchiroli, India: A Prospective Community-Based Study. - Stroke
  10. High Prevalence of Stroke in Rural Gadchiroli, India: A Community-Based Study - Neuroepidemiology
  11. Simple clinical criteria to identify sepsis or pneumonia in neonates in the community needing treatment or referral. - Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal
  12. Barriers to Malaria Control among Marginalized Tribal Communities: A Qualitative Study - PLOS ONE
  13. Setting Implementation Research Priorities to Reduce Preterm Births and Stillbirths at the Community Level - PLOS Medicine
  14. Background of the Field Trial of Home-Based Neonatal Care in Gadchiroli, India - Journal of Perinatology
  15. Methods and the Baseline Situation in the Field Trial of Home-Based Neonatal Care in Gadchiroli, India - Journal of Perinatology
  16. Why Do Neonates Die in Rural Gadchiroli, India? (Part I): Primary Causes of Death Assigned by Neonatologist Based on Prospectively Observed Records - Journal of Perinatology
  17. Why Do Neonates Die in Rural Gadchiroli, India? (Part II): Estimating Population Attributable Risks and Contribution of Multiple Morbidities for Identifying a Strategy to Prevent Deaths - Journal of Perinatology
  18. How to Identify Neonates at Risk of Death in Rural India: Clinical Criteria for the Risk Approach - Journal of Perinatology
  19. Reduced Incidence of Neonatal Morbidities: Effect of Home-Based Neonatal Care in Rural Gadchiroli, India - Journal of Perinatology
  20. Home-Based Neonatal Care: Summary and Applications of the Field Trial in Rural Gadchiroli, India (1993 to 2003) - Journal of Perinatology
  21. Breath Counter: a new device for household diagnosis of childhood pneumonia. - Indian Journal of Pediatrics
  22. Pneumonia in neonates: can it be managed in the community? - Archives of disease in childhood
  23. Simplified antibiotic regimens for neonatal sepsis—AFRINEST - The Lancet
  24. Maternal morbidity during labour and the puerperium in rural homes and the need for medical attention: A prospective observational study in Gadchiroli, India. - BJOG An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
  25. Healthcare seeking behavior for back and Joint pain in rural Gadchiroli, India: A population-based cross-sectional study - Indian Journal of Community Medicine
  26. Comparing modelled predictions of neonatal mortality impacts using LiST with observed results of community-based intervention trials in South Asia - International Journal of Epidemiology
  27. Neonatal resuscitation in low-resource settings: What, who, and how to overcome challenges to scale up? - International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics
  28. Universal Access to Effective Antibiotics is Essential for Tackling Antibiotic Resistance. - J Law Med Ethics

Other Publications

Here is a list of some other publications by Abhay and Rani Bang:

  1. Community Participation in Research and Action Against Alcoholism - World Health Forum
  2. Health Insurance, Assurance and Empowerment in India - The Lancet
  3. Tobacco vs Development Private Spending on Tobacco in Gadchiroli District - Economic and Political Weekly
  4. Child Mortality in Maharashtra - Economic and Political Weekly
  5. Minimum Wages for Agricultural Labour: A Critique of Page Committee Recommendations - Economic and Political Weekly
  6. Vitamin A and Childhood Mortality-The New Magic Pill - Economic and Political Weekly
  7. Community Participation in FP Programme: A Report - Economic and Political Weekly
  8. Why Women Hide Them - Manushi
  9. Was the Gadchiroli trial ethical? Response from the principal investigator - Indian Journal of Medical Ethics
  10. Against Liquor – Gadchiroli and Gorbachev - Medico Friend Circle Bulletin
  11. People’s Participation and Economic Self Reliance in Community Health - Medico Friend Circle Bulletin
  12. Food Requirements as a Basis for Minimum Wages - Medico Friend Circle Bulletin
  13. Other Side of Health Education - Medico Friend Circle Bulletin

Positions Held

Apart from being the founder directors of SEARCH, Abhay and Rani Bang have served on various national and state level committees. Some of them are as follows:

Abhay and Rani Bang

Authored Books, Essays, Letters

Marathi Books

(In this book Abhay Bang has written about his experiences during his heart disease and the learning he has gained due to it. The book won the Kelkar Award for the Best Literary Book in Marathi, 2000.)

(This book won the Literary Award of the Government of Maharashtra. Goin means Friend in the Gondi language of tribal people. The book describes the relationship of tribal women with various trees in Gadchiroli district.)

(This book is about the perceptions of rural women regarding various issues of reproductive health.)

English Book

Abhay Bang has written an article "Meeting the Mahatma"[32] which is published in English Kumarbharti Textbook of Class 9 of Maharashtra State Board of Secondary and Higher Secondary Education. Two of his articles "My Magical School"[33] and "Sevagram to Shodhgram"[34] have been translated in English by Prof. Arvind Gupta. He has written an open letter to the Chief Minister of Maharashtra, Devendra Fadnavis, urging him to act on balanced development of Vidarbha and Marathwada regions of Maharashtra and to take steps to reduce liquor consumption in the state.[35]

Work

After returning to India they started working in Gadchiroli. They founded SEARCH in December 1985 and started working on community health problems in the tribal and rural areas of Gadchiroli. SEARCH established a partnership with communities in Gadchiroli for health and development and helped create “tribal-friendly” clinics and a hospital in the district.

Reduction in Infant Mortality Rate

When the couple started holding people[36] health assemblies they found that addressing infant mortality was a pressing need. The death of a one-month-old child within minutes of being brought to them greatly impacted the couple. They found that there were 18 causes that may have been responsible for that infant’s death, ranging from poverty, diarrhoea, infection or pneumonia to lack of a hospital. The challenge was how to save an infant who can die of 18 causes.[37] The Bangs and their colleagues at SEARCH conducted world-class research on practical approaches to reduce mortality of young children in resource-constrained settings. Bang found out a simple but radical solution – training of the village women in neonatal care.[1] He wrote a draft of the action research to be conducted and sought comments from his mentor, Professor Carl Taylor, the founder of the Department of International Health at Johns Hopkins University. In a handwritten note on the draft, Taylor wrote 'Abhay, this will be the most important work that you will ever do in your life'.[38] Subsequent work by Abhay Bang and his colleagues in two of the most notable of their studies demonstrated the feasibility and effectiveness of community-based management of childhood pneumonia and the provision of home-based neonatal care by community health workers.

Home Based Neonatal Care (HBNC) model developed by Bang has resulted in reduction in infant mortality in the study villages of Gadchiroli. The home-based neonatal care interventions developed at SEARCH ignited worldwide interest and research on preventing neonatal deaths in high-mortality, resource-constrained settings. Prior to that, such deaths were considered nearly impossible to avert. As a result of their work, home-based neonatal care and community-based management of childhood pneumonia are now being implemented throughout the world in these settings.[7] Although initially the medical fraternity objected to Bang’s unconventional methods, they gradually understood his wisdom to provide an alternative to a large village community. Later, Indian paediatricians, after studying the evidence from the field, wholeheartedly backed Bang’s initiative to save newborns. Today, based on Bang’s Gadchiroli model, 800,000 village women in India are now being trained by the government under the ASHA programme.[37] A report from the Harvard University South Asia Institute states that "SEARCH is world renowned for its pioneering work in home-based neonatal care", "the landmark paper, published in the Lancet, changed the medical community's perception of community health workers and the power of home based care for neonates forever" and "the success of the HBNC program spawned the creation of over 800,000 "ASHA" workers through India's National Rural Health Mission." [39] India has incorporated this model in 12th national five-year plan to reduce infant mortality. This field trial showed that newborn care can be brought out of the confines of big hospitals and high tech units and be so simplified that it can be provided in any village in any home. After this research the global newborn care has never been the same. This approach, which brought down the infant mortality rate in rural Gadchiroli from 121 per 1000 live births to 30, was honoured by The Lancet in 2005 as one of the Vintage Papers. The editor and the historian of the journal considered Bang's paper on newborn care to be one of the milestone ones published in 180 years.[6] This approach has been incorporated in the national program by the Government of India and has been accepted by the WHO, UNICEF and USAID for reducing newborn mortality in developing countries.[40][39]

Abhay Bang with the Breath Counter he designed

In May 2017, the High Court of Bombay invited Dr. Abhay Bang to provide suggestions about how to reduce child mortality and malnutrition in the state of Maharashtra. The High Court accepted the suggestions made by Dr. Bang and directed the state government to incorporate the recommendations in its policy decisions and take appropriate actions.[41]

Liquor Ban in Gadchiroli District

Abhay and Rani Bang were driving force for the movement of liquor ban in Gadchiroli district. Gadchiroli is the first district in Maharashtra where liquor is banned due to demand by the public. Bang made people of Gadchiroli aware about ill effects of alcohol, which led to demand from people to ban alcohol in Gadchiroli. Maharashtra government has come up with ban on alcohol in Gadchiroli. In 1990, the couple raised a movement for liquor ban in Gadchiroli district. The movement resulted in liquor ban in the district in year 1992, being the first example in India of liquor ban due to public demand. In May 2012, Abhay Bang was member of panel to study ban of Liquor in chandrapur district.[42] He advocates the need for a alcohol and tobacco free society since as per the Global Burden of Diseases 2015, alcohol and tobacco are two of the top ten causes of death and disease in India. Dr. Abhay Bang is developing a multi-pronged approach named "Muktipath" in the district of Gadchiroli to reduce the prevalence of alcohol and tobacco consumption there.[43] He also welcomed Supreme Cout of India's ban on liquor shops on state and national highways.[44]

Abhay and Rani Bang

Women's Issues

Rani Bang has worked extensively on women's medical issues. The community based study of gynaecological problems in rural area that she conducted in 1988 is the first study in the world focusing on women's health beyond maternity care. Rani Bang first brought to the notice of the world that rural women had a large hidden burden of gynecological diseases. She subsequently trained the Dais in villages to make them village level health workers. With convincing evidence she advocated the need for a comprehensive reproductive health care package for rural women in India.[45] This study initiated the programme of women's reproductive health all over the world specifically in developing countries. She has written a book – 'Putting Woman First', which throws light on women's issues in rural India. Their research showed that nearly 92 percent of women had some kind of gynaecological issues.[16] Her research in this field has changed the understanding of this issue worldwide and global policy has changed accordingly. Rani Bang was one of the principal speakers in Tietze symposium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil in 1990. She served as a consultant to INCLEN (International Clinical Epidemiology Network) for Reproductive health, IWHAM (International Women's Health Advocates on Microbicides), 10th Five Year Plan Maharashtra Health and Nutrition Committee Member. She was nominated for Nobel Peace Prize in 2003 as a member of 1000 women worldwide for peace prize.[5] Rani Bang has worked on women's reproductive health issues, sexually transmitted diseases and AIDS control, adolescent sexual health, tribal health, alcohol and alcoholism. She conducts sessions on sex education called 'Tarunyabhaan' for adolescents and teenagers across Maharashtra.[46] Rani Bang has been awarded with National Award for Women’s Development through Application of Science & Technology in recognition of her outstanding and pioneering contribution for the past two and a half decades on improving women’s health in rural India through an innovative and powerful approach of research with the people and for the people. The award was conferred upon her by the President of India at the National Conference on Showcasing Cutting Edge Science & Technology by Women in New Delhi.[45]

Tribal Health

Dr. Abhay and Dr. Rani Bang have been working with the tribal communities in the forest area of Gadchiroli district in Maharashtra since 1986. They found malaria to pose the biggest health concern for this population. So, regular medical treatment apart, they also sought to make the local adivasis aware about the importance of using insecticide-treated mosquito nets. They also run a mobile medical unit in the forty eight tribal villages in the Dhanora block of Gadchiroli district and have a network of village volunteers trained in providing primary care in these villages. In July 2017, the Government of Maharashtra formed a task force to control the spread of malaria in the district of Gadchiroli. Dr. Abhay Bang has been appointed as the head of this task force which comprises of the nonprofit SEARCH, Tata Trusts, National Institute of Research and Tribal Health (NIRTH) and the Government of Maharashtra.[47] Dr. Abhay Bang is chairing a 13-member expert committee set up by Union Health Ministry and the Ministry of Tribal Affairs, tasked with coming out with a nationwide status report on tribal health issues along with suggesting possible policy formulations. While the “old” problems of malaria, malnutrition and mortality persist, Dr. Abhay Bang emphasises “new” health issues among tribals partly due to outside socio-cultural influences and steady inroads by market forces. Tribal women now list alcohol addiction among men as their biggest concern. The same goes with tobacco, with over 60 per cent of adults in Gadchiroli consuming it daily. These, alongside addition of salt in their foods and stress, are contributing to increased incidence of hypertension, feels Bang. The problems of language barrier and lack of motivation among healthcare staff, besides vacancies and absenteeism when it comes to working in tribal areas, has rendered the formal public healthcare system virtually dysfunctional.[48]

NIRMAN

In 2006, they started an initiative – Nirman, for identifying and nurturing young social change-makers in Maharashtra. It is an educational process to train the youth to take up crucial issues and problems in the society. NIRMAN provides guidance, expertise and environment to inculcate self learning and encourages youth for social action. NIRMAN includes a series of 3 camps, each separated by 6 months. So a batch of NIRMAN goes through 3 camps in a period of 1 year. A camp generally runs for 7–10 days at SEARCH, Gadchiroli. NIRMAN is a learning process based on Nai Talim way of education introduced by Mahatma Gandhi. It believes in – problem based learning instead of – classroom based learning.[49] NIRMAN initiative is providing a common platform for youth to engage, self-educate and decide on how they can make a difference to the society.

Started in 2006, NIRMAN brings together a group of youth aged between 18–28 years who are looking to give meaning to their lives. Amrut, Abhay and Rani Bang's younger son actively manage NIRMAN.[50] Abhay thinks that it is important to make present generation of doctors think about social challenges. "All doctors can earn enough to make a decent living and they must think about the purpose of their lives. Change would happen the moment they start contemplating." He believes that medical students should regularly be given rural or tribal stints as part of their curriculum so that they are exposed to the real challenges. He thinks that it is equally important to reward doctors who shun the charm of corporate world to serve the real people in need.[51]

Non-Communicable Diseases

Abhay and Rani Bang and their team at SEARCH has started working on the non-communicable diseases (NCDs) as that is emerging as a priority area. A study conducted by SEARCH in 86 villages of Gadchiroli district has shown that rural people are now falling prey to lifestyle diseases like stroke which emerged as the most frequent cause of death. One in seven (14%) deaths in these villages occurs due to stroke, showing that the places like Gadchiroli are now passing through an 'epidemiological transition'. 87.3% stroke deaths occurred at home, indicating that rural people don't approach hospitals for treatment. Taking the study ahead, the SEARCH team now plans to test village based solutions to minimize deaths caused due to stroke in Gadchiroli villages in collaboration with the Wellcome Trust of UK and the department of biotechnology of the government of India. Yogeshwar Kalkonde, Neurologist and Senior Research Officer at SEARCH is the main author of the study. The team also included three young MBBS doctors from Nirman. The study has been published in 'Stroke', an international journal published by American Stroke and Heart Association.[52] The work has been presented at the 5th International Conference on Neurology and Epidemiology (November 18–20, 2015) in Australia.[53]

In a study published in Economic and Political Weekly, Bang and SEARCH team members showed that the rural and tribal district of Gadchiroli was spending approximately ₹73.4 Crore. annually on consuming tobacco and related products.[54] More than 50% of the population was consuming tobacco. SEARCH has been conducting programs to spread awareness regarding the ill effects of tobacco use and providing de-addiction services. The Maharashtra state government has formed a 12-member task force under chief minister Devendra Fadnavis for creating awareness about ill effects of using tobacco products and Abhay Bang is an advisor in the force. It will concentrate on Gadchiroli district for the first three years. A committee has also been constituted under the Gadchiroli District Collector for implementing the plans devised by the task force. A representative of Bang's organization SEARCH will be a member of the committee. According to Bang, spread of information and awareness for prevention, initiation of village committees and urban ward committees, implementation of laws and regulations, treatment for deaddiction, counselling via NGOs and stimulation of an alcohol and tobacco free environment in government offices, schools, colleges, markets etc. will be the methods used by the task force.[55]

Surgical Care

The couple, through their organisation SEARCH, built the Maa Danteshwari Hospital for the rural and tribal people of Gadchiroli. Along with OPD and IPD care, a variety of surgeries are also conducted in this setup. Doctors from throughout the state of Maharashtra come and operate in this setup. Spine surgeon from Mumbai, Shekhar Bhojraj and his team of 6 - 8 other spine surgeons have been associated with SEARCH for 10 years and have conducted more than 100 spine surgeries in Gadchiroli. In August 2016, when Rani Bang was to undergo spinal surgery herself, she too was operated in the SEARCH hospital by Shekhar Bhojraj and his wife Shilpa who is an anaesthetist in Mumbai.[56]

Inspirations and Approach

"(After publication in medical journal Lancet) Within a year or two, there was an entirely new approach to women's health worldwide. The global population policy changed from looking at mere reproduction to the whole issue of women's reproductive health. That was our first experience of how powerful this (listening to patients) approach could be."[16]

Media Coverage

The work done by Abhay and Rani Bang and SEARCH has received wide coverage in variety of media and forums, including National Geographic,[57] TIME Magazine,[16] Forbes,[61] The Guardian,[1] The Telegraph,[62] El Pais,[63] The Times of India,[58] The Economic Times,[64] Scroll,[65] Frontline,[66] Hindustan Times,[67][68] Outlook,[69] Business Today,[70][71] Sakal Times,[46] The Week,[5] NDTV,[72] IBN Lokmat,[73] ABP Majha,[74] E TV,[75] Mi Marathi,[76] TEDx,[77] World Economic Forum,[78] Ashoka,[79] CORE,[80] The Center for High Impact Philanthropy at the University of Pennsylvania,[81] Society of Scholars at the Johns Hopkins University,[82] Clinton Global Initiative,[83] Reliance Foundation,[84] MacArthur Foundation,[9] Save the Children Canada,[85] The Center for Compassion and Global Health,[86] Azim Premji University,[87] etc.

Their work has been cited in a variety of journals including British Medical Journal,[88] Reproductive Health Matters,[89] Pediatrics by AAP,[90] Journal of Pakistan Medical Association,[91] The Indian Practitioner,[92] Indian Journal of Rheumatology,[93] The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal,[94] Indian Journal of Cancer,[95] Health, Culture and Society,[96] American Journal of Public Health,[97] Seminars in Neonatology,[98] Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology,[99] Social Scientist,[100] Health Policy and Planning,[101] The New England Journal of Medicine,[102] Community Development Journal,[103] BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth,[104] International Journal of Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Marketing,[105] Indian Journal of Preventive and Social Medicine.

Awards and honors

Abhay and Rani Bang and their organization SEARCH have been felicitated with a number of awards, a few of them are as follows:

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 http://www Archived 26 March 2006 at the Wayback Machine.. Guardian.co.uk Global development, Infant and child mortality, Elizabeth Day – The Observer, Sunday 20 March 2011 Dr Abhay Bang: the revolutionary pediatrician (Accessed on 28 November 2012)
  2. Official website of SEARCH (Archived on 7 November 2012)
  3. Dr Abhay T Bang MD; Rani A Bang MD; Sanjay B Baitule DHMS; M Hanimi Reddy PhD; Mahesh D Deshmukh MSc (4 December 1999). "Effect of home-based neonatal care and management of sepsis on neonatal mortality: field trial in rural India". The Lancet. 354 (9194): 1955–1961. PMID 10622298. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(99)03046-9. Retrieved 17 June 2014.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 SNDT Women's University Convocation Rani Abhay Bang
  5. 1 2
  6. 1 2
  7. Loksatta डॉ. राणी व डॉ. अभय बंग यांना जॉन्स हॉपकिन्स विद्यापीठाचा पुरस्कार (Accessed on 3rd April 2016)
  8. 1 2 3 VIDEO Abhay Bang, SEARCH on MacArthur Award 18 December 2006, 3:03 p.m. Official website of Macarthur foundation (Accessed on 11 November 2012)
  9. My Magical School – Abhay Bang (Accessed on 24 May 2012)
  10. 1 2 Meeting with Mahatma – Abhay Bang (Accessed on 8 November 2012)
  11. Sale, Amoal. "Dr. Abhay Bang – Man with Indomitable Spirit". amoalsale.wordpress.com. Retrieved 17 June 2014.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 Alex Perry – Time Magazine – Monday, 31 October 2005 The Listeners (Accessed on 11 November 2012)
  13. The Economic Times (Accessed on 14 October 2015)
  14. The Hindu - Taking health care to tribal heartland (Accessed on 9 December 2015)
  15. The Times of India, 28th April, 2016 Bang on Central health council
  16. Press Information Bureau of Govt. of India (Accessed on 14 October 2015)
  17. Public Health Foundation of India (Accessed on 14 October 2015)
  18. World Health Organization (Accessed on 14 October 2015)
  19. Times of India (Accessed on 14 October 2015)
  20. Times of India Kelkar report not biased against any region (Accessed on 4th Sept 2016)
  21. The Economic Times (Accessed on 14 October 2015)
  22. The Times of India (Accessed on 14 October 2015)
  23. National Health Mission, Govt. of India (Accessed on 14 October 2015)
  24. NIC, Govt. of India (Accessed on 14 October 2015)
  25. NIC, Ministry of Science and Technology, Govt. of India (Accessed on 14 October 2015)
  26. 1 2 3 4 5 (Accessed on 17 October 2015)
  27. Planning Commission Website, Govt. of India (Accessed on 16 October 2015)
  28. Meeting the Mahatma
  29. "My Magical School : Articles - On and By Gandhi". www.mkgandhi.org. Retrieved 2017-04-09.
  30. Sevagram to Shodhgram
  31. A Postcard from Dr Abhay Bang Accessed on 6th Jan 2016
  32. dictionary
  33. 1 2
  34. Johns Hopkins Magazine SEARCH Mission(Accessed on 3rd April 2016)
  35. 1 2 Task Shifting in Healthcare, Report by Harvard University (Accessed on 7th July 2017)
  36. Brief information about Bang on www.compassioninglobalhealth.org (Accessed on 1 December 2012)
  37. The Hindu 4 May 2017 HC accepts report on malnutrition (Accessed on 6th May 2017)
  38. Times of India 12 February 2012 – Nagpur Liquor panel may suggest ban in Chanda (Accessed on 1 December 2012)
  39. Sakal Guest Editorial on 25th March 2017 मृत्युपथ विरुद्ध ‘मुक्तिपथ’ (Accessed on 8th April, 2017)
  40. The Indian Express 20 March 2017 None For The Road (Accessed on 8th April, 2017)
  41. 1 2 "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 10 September 2015. Retrieved 2015-10-14. (Accessed on 16 October 2015)
  42. 1 2 Sakaal Times, ‘Tarunyabhaan’, a workshop on sex education (Accessed on 16 October 2015)
  43. Times of India Govt forms task force to tackle malaria in G’chiroli (Accessed on 25th July 2017)
  44. The Indian Express A pioneering doctor-activist speaks to The Indian Express about the unique health issues confronting India’s tribal communities (Accessed on 18th January 2016)
  45. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 7 September 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2015. (Accessed on 16 October 2015)
  46. The Times of India, Where youth's discussions veer to country-building (Accessed on 16 October 2015)
  47. Doc couple with heart for neglected Times of India, 27 September 2015 (Accessed on 31 October 2015)
  48. Times of India 16 July 2015, Nagpur Stroke is a major cause of death (Accessed on 31 October)
  49. 5th International Conference on Neurology and Epidemiology, Australia "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 2015-12-01. (Accessed on 30 November)
  50. Economic & Political Weekly 2 Feb 2013 Tobacco vs Development Private Spending on Tobacco in Gadchiroli District (Accessed on 25th Jan 2016)
  51. Times of India, Nagpur 15 Jan 2016 Task force set up to fight tobacco abuse (Accessed on 25th Jan 2016)
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