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Ranjit Roy Chaudhury : ウィキペディア英語版
Ranjit Roy Chaudhury

Ranjit Roy Chaudhury, (November 4, 1930 – October 27, 2015) was an Indian clinical pharmacologist, medical academic and health planner, who headed the National Committee for formulating the policy and guidelines on drugs and clinical trials in India. He was the chairman of the joint programme of World Health Organization and Government of India on ''Rational Use of Drugs in India''. He was the founder president of the (Delhi Medical Council ) and the president of the Delhi Society for Promotion of Rational Use of Drugs.〔
A recipient of the Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Award and the Dr. B. C. Roy Award, Chaudhury was awarded the fourth highest civilian award of the Padma Shri by the Government of India, in 1998.
==Biography==
Chaudhury was born in 1930 in Patna, in the Indian state of Bihar, to Indu and P.C. Roy Chaudhury. His graduate studies in medicine were at the Prince of Wales Medical College, Patna.〔 〕 Later, he secured the doctoral degree of DPhil from Oxford University and joined the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, Delhi in 1958 and served as an assistant professor till 1960, when he moved to Ciba-Geigy Research Center, Bombay as a professor of pharmacology.〔
In 1964, he was appointed as the Head of the Department of Pharmacology at the Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER), Chandigarh.〔 He served the institution as its Dean and superannuated in 1980 as its Director, during which time he started a DM course in Clinical Pharmacology, a first time for India.〔 When the Indian Council of Medical Research set up the ''Toxicology Review Panel'', he was appointed as its founder chairman.
His next posting was at the World Health Organization (WHO), with his base in Geneva. His service with WHO lasted till 1991 and he worked at the Regional Offices at Alexandria and Yangon and at the Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok.〔 Returning to India in 1991, he was involved in various medical organization activities. He was one of the co-founders of Delhi Medical Council, working as its founder president and served PGIMER as the chairman of its selection committee, while retaining his position as a WHO consultant.〔 He was also involved with the National Institute of Immunology, New Delhi as the Emeritus Scientist, holding the post till 2005.〔
During this period, Chaudhury chaired the Board of Trustees of the (International Clinical Epidemiological Network ) (INCLEN) for two terms till 2006 and held its membership.〔 He has also been a member of the ''Sub-Commission in Macroeconomics and Health'' set up by the Government of India in 2005. He became a non-executive independent director of the Indraprastha Medical Corporation in 2008 but relinquished the post in 2014 when he was appointed as the Advisor to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare. He has also been a Non-Executive Director of Super Religare Laboratories〔 and is a member of the Task Force for Research of the Apollo Hospitals Educational and Research Foundation. He sat in the governing bodies of several medical and health institutions and organizations such as PGIMER, ''Population Foundation of India'', Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology, and the ''Foundation for Revitalization of Local Health Traditions'' and the Advisory Council of the India International Centre.〔
In February 2013, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare constituted a committee, ''National Committee for formulating the policy and guidelines on drugs and clinical trials in India'' under the chairmanship of Chaudhury and the committee submitted a report. ''Professor Ranjit Roy Chaudhury Expert Committee to Formulate Policy and Guidelines for Approval of New Drugs, Clinical Trials and Banning of Drugs'', recommending significant changes in the system. The Ministry subsequently accepted the proposals. Besides 275 articles in national and international journals, he has written 25 textbooks of medical education〔 and a book on Ayurveda, titled ''The Healing Powers of Herbs''.
Chaudhury died on October 27, 2015, eight days before his 85th birthday, during a visit to Chennai, Tamil Nadu, where he was attending a conference on Pharmacovigilance.

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