Team:HKUST-Hong Kong/Overview

From 2012.igem.org

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           <p>Our last year iGEM human practice team conducted a survey among Hong Kong people. However, the result turns out to be that most people have known little about the term "synthetic biology". Due to the difficulties in forming constructive ideas from this kind of result, we want to do something that can get deeper understanding of people&rsquo;s attitudes toward it, regardless of their backgrounds. Thus, we adopt the way of interview. Owing to the flexibility and other features of interview, we are able to comprehend people’s perspectives of synthetic biology better and also lay a foundation for future surveys and interviews. By targeting at four distinctive individuals – one politician, one journalist, one university student, and one upper secondary student, we indeed understand their perspectives in depth, and our interviews can be used as a foundation for further human practices.<br><a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:HKUST-Hong_Kong/Interview">Click to see more</a></p>
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           <p>Our last year iGEM human practice team conducted a survey among Hong Kong people. However, the result turns out to be that most people have known little about the term "synthetic biology". Due to the difficulties in forming constructive ideas from this kind of result, we want to do something that can get deeper understanding of people&rsquo;s attitudes toward it, regardless of their backgrounds. Thus, we adopt the way of interview. Owing to the flexibility and other features of interview, we are able to comprehend people’s perspectives of synthetic biology better and also lay a foundation for future surveys and interviews. By targeting at four distinctive individuals – one politician, one journalist, one university student, and one upper secondary student, we indeed understand their perspectives in depth, and our interviews can be used as a foundation for further human practices.<br><b><a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:HKUST-Hong_Kong/Interview">Click to see more</a></b></p>
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           <p>The steady increase in wealth of East Asian nations during the past few decades has seen the population transition towards diets comprising more fats and less fibre. And there is general consensus among the scientific and medical community that such a diet leads to higher incidence of colorectal cancer. Public health bodies including the World Health Organization (WHO) and  National Cancer Centre of Singapore (NCCS) therefore predict that current increasing trends in colorectal cancer will continue.</p>
           <p>The steady increase in wealth of East Asian nations during the past few decades has seen the population transition towards diets comprising more fats and less fibre. And there is general consensus among the scientific and medical community that such a diet leads to higher incidence of colorectal cancer. Public health bodies including the World Health Organization (WHO) and  National Cancer Centre of Singapore (NCCS) therefore predict that current increasing trends in colorectal cancer will continue.</p>
<p>Hong Kong, being a region that started developing earlier, witnessed a 190% increase in the crude rate of colorectal cancer incidence  between 1983 and 2006. (See <a href="http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1440-1746.2009.06130.x/pdf">this</a> document.) It is on track to overtake lung cancer soon as the deadliest form of cancer in Hong Kong. </p>
<p>Hong Kong, being a region that started developing earlier, witnessed a 190% increase in the crude rate of colorectal cancer incidence  between 1983 and 2006. (See <a href="http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1440-1746.2009.06130.x/pdf">this</a> document.) It is on track to overtake lung cancer soon as the deadliest form of cancer in Hong Kong. </p>
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<p>Thus we decided that our human practice activities would have to involve interacting with the local cancer therapy community in a certain way.<br><a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:HKUST-Hong_Kong/Presentation">Click to see more</a></p></p>
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<p>Thus we decided that our human practice activities would have to involve interacting with the local cancer therapy community in a certain way.<br><b><a href="https://2012.igem.org/Team:HKUST-Hong_Kong/Presentation">Click to see more</a></b></p></p>
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Revision as of 11:54, 26 September 2012

Team:HKUST-Hong Kong - 2012.igem.org

OVERVIEW

Human Practice

Our HKUST iGEM team this year has two main focuses on our human practice. First, we intend to create a new methodology to gain deep insight into people’s perspectives on synthetic biology. Second, a project-specific human practice is our intent, which will promote both synthetic biology and our project. Bearing these two goals in mind, we have conducted two human practices this year – the interviews and the presentation for Hong Kong Cancer Fund.

Interviews

Our last year iGEM human practice team conducted a survey among Hong Kong people. However, the result turns out to be that most people have known little about the term "synthetic biology". Due to the difficulties in forming constructive ideas from this kind of result, we want to do something that can get deeper understanding of people’s attitudes toward it, regardless of their backgrounds. Thus, we adopt the way of interview. Owing to the flexibility and other features of interview, we are able to comprehend people’s perspectives of synthetic biology better and also lay a foundation for future surveys and interviews. By targeting at four distinctive individuals – one politician, one journalist, one university student, and one upper secondary student, we indeed understand their perspectives in depth, and our interviews can be used as a foundation for further human practices.
Click to see more

Presentation

The steady increase in wealth of East Asian nations during the past few decades has seen the population transition towards diets comprising more fats and less fibre. And there is general consensus among the scientific and medical community that such a diet leads to higher incidence of colorectal cancer. Public health bodies including the World Health Organization (WHO) and National Cancer Centre of Singapore (NCCS) therefore predict that current increasing trends in colorectal cancer will continue.

Hong Kong, being a region that started developing earlier, witnessed a 190% increase in the crude rate of colorectal cancer incidence between 1983 and 2006. (See this document.) It is on track to overtake lung cancer soon as the deadliest form of cancer in Hong Kong.

Thus we decided that our human practice activities would have to involve interacting with the local cancer therapy community in a certain way.
Click to see more