Bangladesh court orders doctors to write legibly
Team Udayavani, Jan 10, 2017, 4:41 PM IST
Dhaka: Doctors around the world over are renowned for their bad handwriting, but now a Bangladesh court is seeking to ban the sloppy scrawl after prescriptions became so illegible that patients were taking the wrong medicines.
Doctors will now have to either type their prescriptions or write them in block capitals, Deputy Attorney general Mokhlesur Rahman told AFP after the court issued its judgement late Monday.
“The court has ordered the health secretary to circulate the ruling among the country’s doctors. He was also asked to report on improvement of the situation within six weeks,” he said.
The court also said doctors must use generic drug names rather than specifying particular brands.
“Many patients and even some pharmacists cannot read what the doctors scribble on the prescriptions,” said lawyer Manzil Morshed, who filed the public interest suit.
“Therefore, very often they take wrong medicines. It costs them money and exposes them to unnecessary and sometimes, dangerous health hazards.”
The court order was widely praised on social media, although some doctors asked the government to do its bit by introducing a computerised prescription system.
“Why blame us when you can’t implement computerised prescription system?” posted Farhan Kabir on Facebook.
Udayavani is now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel and stay updated with the latest news.
Top News
Related Articles More
Trump says he will use ‘economic force’ against Canada
6.8-magnitude quake in Tibet kills 126 people, tremors felt in Nepal
Minor sisters burn father alive over alleged sexual abuse
China shuts down Mt Everest scenic area after 6.8-magnitude quake hits Tibet
Congressman Suhash Subramanyam takes oath on Gita
MUST WATCH
Latest Additions
Downward revision of GDP growth estimates set gloomy backdrop to Union Budget: Congress
Don’t like words like legacy and milestone: Hrithik Roshan on 25 years in Bollywood
Twist in naxalite surrender: Naxals to surrender in Bengaluru instead of Chikkamagaluru
Cybersecurity firm Rubrik announces new office in Bengaluru as part of expansion plans in India
ISRO has major missions ahead, says newly appointed chairman
Thanks for visiting Udayavani
You seem to have an Ad Blocker on.
To continue reading, please turn it off or whitelist Udayavani.