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NASA’s mental health research helping trapped miners

The 33 Chilean miners trapped 700m underground in the San Jose copper and gold mine have been trapped for over a month. The rescue operation is difficult and it is likely the men will be underground until Christmas. As well as the obvious technical challenges there is another more human one – how can people cope mentally with such an extended period underground?

The Chilean government have requested help from NASA, who have researched the problems facing astronauts spending extended periods in space. There have been reports of depression amongst the miners, and NASA psychologists are helping the miners with steps such as distinguishing night from day, establishing a routine, and allocating separate areas for different activities such as eating and sleeping.

The mental well-being of the men matters not least because the miners themselves will need to clear the many tonnes of rubble created from the drilling of the escape tunnel.  So they will need to be willing and able to take on this tough physical task.

Mental health research in general is not viewed positively by the public. One surprising – and disappointing – finding of last year’s VA barometer is that the public have a low level of confidence in the potential of mental health research to improve people’s lives. This is perhaps an opportunity for mental health research to be given some positive and much needed attention.

Science, antibiotics and international relations

The fear that “superbugs” resistant to antibiotics will develop is not a new one. This week, the medical journal “The Lancet” published a paper reporting an antibiotic resistant strain of a bacteria, New Delhi metallo-β-lactamase 1 (NDM-1), which poses a “potentially major global health problem”.

This is clearly a worrying and serious development, and many newspapers took the opportunity to use panic-fuelled headlines. The Guardian, for example, declared that “the era of antibiotics is coming to a close” and that “…the post-antibiotic apocalypse is within sight”.

There is also another angle to this which the media have seized upon: this strain of bacteria has reportedly been introduced into the UK by “medical tourists” who travel from the UK to India for surgical procedures. There is an implication that Indian hospitals are somewhat less clean than those in the UK and are therefore responsible for the NDM-superbug entering UK hospitals.

Indian scientists have been quick to respond. “Baseless, unfair and circulated with an intention to malign the country’s flourishing medical tourism industry,” is how senior doctors in Delhi have responded to the controversy. They also take issue with the use of the term “New Delhi” in the name of the antibiotic.

So, we will have to wait and see how this story turns out – a serious debate about the problems of antibiotic resistance, or a diplomatic spat between India and the UK about the ethics of medical tourism and the hygiene of Indian hospitals.

// Esther Crooks

Links:

The Lancet original article

The Guardian article

Irish Times report

Article in the Hindu: Delhi doctors fight back

VA-type dialogues at Speakers’ Corner

As VA knows there is no better way of having dialogue with the public than to talk with them directly. And some scientists from London Zoo were doing just this last week in impressive fashion.

Fifteen brave scientists from the Zoological Society of London went to Speakers’ Corner in London’s Hyde Park with a mission to talk about the scientific issues the public care about.

These “soapbox scientists” either gave mini-lectures, or asked controversial and stimulating questions to try and attract passers-by.

There was a diverse range of subjects:

”Life on Mars from life on Earth”, ”Where do species come from anyway?” and ”Pheromones: Smells at the heart of life”;”Bees in crisis: Well known fact or widely held belief?”, ”Global warming and a cold winter”.

Members of the Zoological society kicked off the questioning with questions sent via Twitter and then the public joined in. Questions included “Is global warming real? If it is, what can we do about it?” “Will humans evolve?” and “Are polar bears becoming cannibals?”

The scientists also had questions for the public – “Why fight to preserve the British green belt, but not the foreign rainforests?”; “Is development worth the price of diversity?”

The event was funded by the Research Councils UK for a modest £6000 (70 000 SEK) and so perhaps may become a more popular method in these difficult times. And hopefully it is something that will happen more often.

Commenting after event, one of the speakers professor Stephan Harrison from Exeter University , said he had come round to the view that engaging with the public was not just an important thing to do, it is a scientist’s obligation.

And Alun Anderson from New Scientist added that this kind of one-on-one connection could be positively ”life-changing”.

// Esther Crooks

Link to New Scientist article

Link to ZSL

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Darth Vader just needed some psychotherapy

French researchers are doing their bit to make discussing mental health problems acceptable.

Psychiatrist Eric Bui and his colleagues at Toulouse University Hospital have written a letter in the journal Psychiatry Research entitled “Is Anakin Skywalker suffering from borderline personality disorder?”

For those of you not familiar with the Star Wars saga, Anakin Skywalker starts out as a heroic Jedi knight but later turns to the “Dark Side” and becomes the arch-villain Darth Vader.

Bui says Anakin Skywalker meets six out the nine diagnostic criteria for Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD), and could perhaps have been helped by psychotherapy.

Very entertaining research, of course but is it of any use? Bui and his colleagues argue that this study is important in several respects. It can help teach students about BPD; it can help explain the appeal of Star Wars to teenagers who present more frequent BPD traits than others;  and perhaps most importantly it can help increase recognition and acceptance of mental illness.

Recent VA studies have shown that the public have a low confidence in the potential of research to help prevent or cure mental illness. Any high profile sufferer – even if he is fictional – can perhaps help to address this issue.

// Esther Crooks

Some links

Darth Vader: May the Shrink be with you (The Guardian)

Is Darth Vader Mentally Ill? (The Week)

Does Darth Vader meet the diagnostic criteria for borderline personality disorder? (The British Psychological Society)

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Rocket Science: might it escape the cuts?

Germany and Britain are heading for deep and severe cuts in public spending. The politicians have given sombre speeches about the “tough times” that lie ahead.

However there have been indications in both countries that “Space research” will escape.

Speaking at the Berlin Air Show this week, Professor Jan Woerner, chairman of the German Aerospace Centre (DLR), said “he does not expect space to be affected by the nation’s big austerity drive”.

In the UK, the new science minister David Willets has said in a BBC interview, ”I believe in the space industry. Britain has a comparative advantage and we will carry on backing space.”

It remains to be seen whether the two countries allow space research to escape the cuts. However it is interesting and heartening that the politicians do not want to be associated with cutting all investment in science. Money may be found to invest in our technological future in the most glamorous way possible – space exploration and rocket science. In these times where little is exempt from cuts this is perhaps some reason for optimism.

Some links:

German space escapes budget cuts – link to the BBC article

Coalition wants UK space lift-off – Link here

// Esther Crooks

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BP and Crowd-Sourcing

The tragedy of the leaking oil well in Gulf of Mexico continues. BP is hoping its latest capping scheme will succeed. But in the meantime all we can do is watch, wait and hope.

Right?

Well, no. Why not come up with a solution? BP is dedicating some of its resources to heading a team asking for ideas from the public. It has so far received over 32,000 ideas.

This is crowd-sourcing in action. Originally used in a business context, the term ”crowd-sourcing” refers to the using ideas from a very wide but non-expert audience to try and solve intractable problems that are baffling the experts.  The crowd has a new perspective, has an enormous collective imagination and can suggest something completely unexpected.

However there have been some criticisms of BP for not releasing enough detailed technical information about pressure, pipe diameters, depths and so on.

As summed up by Prof Steven Sears, chairman of the petroleum engineering department at Louisiana State University, it is unlikely that ”a random guy with an English degree” will crack this problem. It is probably going to be someone with a science background. Perhaps ”… someone who has some tangential experience – it isn’t some experience that BP thinks to tap.”

Many parts of the media have ridiculed the whole idea – “If the experts can’t solve it then what is the point of asking us?” they cry.

Personally I salute BP for this – the cost is minimal and although the chances are perhaps small they are exploring all avenues, swallowing their pride and asking the whole of society for help.

So if you have any ideas, let BP know today! You never know, they might not have thought of it…..

Some links

BP and the oil spill

The story on the BBC

Crowd-sourcing

//Esther Crooks

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Frankenbugs: Science in the Headlines

It is not often that science is the headline news item but the creation of the first synthetic organism has dominated the worldwide news these past weeks.

These synthetic bacterium, created by American biologists Craig Venter and Hamilton Smith, have already been dubbed “Frankenbugs” and have been greeted with some not unpredictable outrage from certain corners. There have been accusations of “playing God”, along with many terrifying predictions of the potential creation of artificial plants, animals and perhaps humans in the future.

This technology has great potential in the development of greener fuels, drought resistant crops and better drugs. There are also some very major ethical and technological concerns to be addressed.

So far the debate reminds me very much of the one surrounding GM crops over the last decade. I only hope that the science community rises to the challenge of giving the “Frankenbugs” a fairer hearing than “Frankenfoods” have since the 1990s.

Some reports of the breakthrough:

The Economist

The BBC

The Boston Globe

Le Monde

The Times (London)

Esther Crooks

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The new UK science minister is known as David “Two Brains” Willets by the UK media. This nick-name is primarily because he is supposed to have an enormous intellect (and perhaps a little to do with his large forehead…).

In many ways this appointment is good for science. Mr Willets is a senior and well known politician with a lot of experience. Being very clever is obviously an asset. And the new Prime Minister has made the science minister a “Minister of State” which basically means he is quite high profile, and science has not been swept away to be ignored in a quiet corner.

Mr Willets is regrettably not a scientist. He studied Philosophy, Politics and Economics, although many people are reportedly “impressed” by his grasp of scientific subjects.

His appointment has been welcomed by many in the scientific establishment, including the President of the Royal Society, Lord Martin Rees, who said Mr Willets was someone who had ”strong links to universities and a clear appreciation of the value of research”.

Let’s hope so. The new government is planning cuts of £6 billion over the next year. There are many who think science is an easy target, and certainly easier than education or health care.

And there are not many scientifically literate MPs for Mr Willets to look to for support. Only 71 MPs out of 650 have a science background. This shameful total is even lower than before the election when there were 86.

There is an emergency budget on 22nd June and there have been no pre-election promises regarding science funding. So fingers crossed that two brains is enough to save UK science from heavy funding cuts.

//Esther Crooks

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The CSI effect – this time on the US legal system

You have probably heard of the so-called “CSI effect”. Forensic science made popular by TV programmes featuring brave and handsome gun-toting forensic scientists catching the criminals armed with a swab and microscope….? 

No bad thing of course and no one really believes it’s true. Do they?

Well, yes they do. And it is having some far reaching consequences.

A recent article in the Economist magazine  highlights American research that shows how TV programmes about forensic science have affected the American legal system.  The most obvious problem in the court rooms is that jurors think they understand about forensic science when they do not.

The whole legal process is being slowed down considerably. Jury selection is taking longer to eliminate people who judge science by television standards; prosecutors are introducing a “negative evidence” witness to explain why types of evidence are not found at the scene; and there is a lot of time spent explaining probability – despite getting 100% certain matches from a micro-spot of blood on CSI, this is rarely the case in real life.

A secret fan of CSI myself, I particularly like the wonderful machine which can identify a sample of anything at all (mud from the far west side of New York, clay from Ireland, sand from Sweden….). You just put in your sample, press a button and hey presto! A match is found. This, unfortunately, is also pure fiction. Something else some jury members are surprised by.

Criminals also watch TV and there has been evidence of more glove wearing, more bleaching and less envelope licking at crime scenes around the USA.

But jurors are questioning more, which can never be a bad thing. And hopefully the judges and lawyers are up to the job of answering their concerns. Let’s just hope they themselves  do not rely on the TV for their knowledge of forensic science.

Esther Crooks

Research by Evan Durnal of the University of Central Missouri’s Criminal Justice Department. The conclusions have just been published in Forensic Science International.

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Vote for the Science Party

Tomorrow there will be a general election in the UK. Science, perhaps not surprisingly, is not making the headlines in these turbulent economic times.
But nevertheless, in many ways there is much to be optimistic about. This election is the first time all the parties have included science funding in their manifesto. There have been debates between important scientists and politicians in prestigious places. I was pleased to find that all the science spokesmen for the three main parties were educated in science to at least degree level.
The media have covered science fairly extensively too, all things considered. Notably the Guardian newspaper has run an excellent series about science policy in the election featuring interviews with all the parties standing at the election.
I say all parties, but one is notably missing. For we are seeing for the first time a candidate from the latest political party, The Science Party.
Dr Michael Brooks leader of the science party is standing against local MP for Bosworth David Tredinnick after a series of outrageously anti-science incidents. Mr Tredinnick has recently been opposing the government’s report into the inefficacy of homeopathy; Mr Tredinnick was also found to have spent hundreds of pounds of MPs expenses on astrology software; and in a debate last week accused scientists of being “racially prejudiced” if they questioned the efficacy of Chinese and Indian healthcare systems that use homeopathy and astrology and take into account the phases of the moon.
This would be alarming enough from one MP but in addition, 70 MPs have signed Mr Tredinnick’s motion to have the report into homeopathy ignored.
To quote Dr Brooks,
It’s a sign that many MPs do not take science seriously enough”.
“David Tredinnick is the thick end of the wedge, but there are plenty of MPs who dismiss scientific results,” Brooks says. “When you are making decisions about what kind of healthcare our country can offer its people, that is potentially disastrous.”
Hooray for the science party! Today Bosworth. Tomorrow the world.
Esther Crooks

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