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+ | <h1 style="color:#f20253; text-align: center; font-size: 40px; line-height: 40px;">Human Practices: Gold</h1> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Throughout our iGEM project, we took several steps to understand our project in a social context by interacting with experts in endometriosis and refining our project's design to better meet the needs of patients. <br><br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <h1 style="color:#ffffff; background-color:#F20253;; -moz-border-radius: 15px; -webkit-border-radius: 15px; padding:15px; text-align: center; font-family: Trebuchet MS">A Summary of Meetings with Experts</h1> | ||
+ | <p></p> | ||
+ | <ol> | ||
+ | <li><b>Prof. Linda Griffith</b>, herself a patient with endometriosis, provided us with perspective on how patients struggle to receive an appropriate diagnosis. She helped us reframe our project from a gene therapy to a diagnostic that could provide much better help to patients. </li> | ||
+ | <li><b>Prof. Asgi Fazleabas</b>, one of the leading experts in endometriosis helped us reframe the specific biomarkers our diagnostic sough to detect. He helped us understand that progesterone resistance is one of the most robust phenotypes associated with endometriosis across most patients - even moreso than the miRNA dysregulation we initially wanted to sense for alone. This helped us realized that to make a diagnostic with high social value we needed to create sensors for not only estrogen signaling sensing, but also progesterone signaling sensing. </li> | ||
+ | <li><b>Prof. Kevin Osteen</b>, helped us understand some of the challenges associated with using microfluidics in a diagnostic and got us thinking about incorporating such a system into our diagnostic. </li> | ||
+ | <li><b>The BU Hardware iGEM Team</b>, helped us understand some of the challenges associated with designing microfluidics and provided us with valuable insights into how we could streamline the process in order to make our diagnostic robust and reliable. </li> | ||
+ | </ol> | ||
Revision as of 14:54, 19 October 2016
Human Practices: Gold
Throughout our iGEM project, we took several steps to understand our project in a social context by interacting with experts in endometriosis and refining our project's design to better meet the needs of patients.A Summary of Meetings with Experts
- Prof. Linda Griffith, herself a patient with endometriosis, provided us with perspective on how patients struggle to receive an appropriate diagnosis. She helped us reframe our project from a gene therapy to a diagnostic that could provide much better help to patients.
- Prof. Asgi Fazleabas, one of the leading experts in endometriosis helped us reframe the specific biomarkers our diagnostic sough to detect. He helped us understand that progesterone resistance is one of the most robust phenotypes associated with endometriosis across most patients - even moreso than the miRNA dysregulation we initially wanted to sense for alone. This helped us realized that to make a diagnostic with high social value we needed to create sensors for not only estrogen signaling sensing, but also progesterone signaling sensing.
- Prof. Kevin Osteen, helped us understand some of the challenges associated with using microfluidics in a diagnostic and got us thinking about incorporating such a system into our diagnostic.
- The BU Hardware iGEM Team, helped us understand some of the challenges associated with designing microfluidics and provided us with valuable insights into how we could streamline the process in order to make our diagnostic robust and reliable.
iGEM teams are unique and leading the field because they "go beyond the lab" to imagine their projects in a social/environmental context, to better understand issues that might influence the design and use of their technologies.
Teams work with students and advisors from the humanities and social sciences to explore topics concerning ethical, legal, social, economic, safety or security issues related to their work. Consideration of these Human Practices is crucial for building safe and sustainable projects that serve the public interest.
For more information, please see the Human Practices Hub.