Editorial Features
- 19 October 2022BREATHE-ing New Life to Cancer Research
While most research focuses on finding a cure for the big C, Dr. Jingmei Li, a Group Leader at A*STAR’s Genome Institute of Singaore, takes the off-beaten path of investigating how precision medicine and early screening can interact. Her work strongly advocates amplifying the importance of preventative measures in breast cancer screening. The prevalence […]
Read More - 14 September 2022Making Genomics Part of the Clinical Routine
Through its philosophy of integration and robust understanding of health economics, Australian Genomics is helping embed genomic technologies in medical practice. For 10 weeks after her birth, Mackenzie Casella was the picture of happy and healthy baby girl. Nine weeks later, however, she started crying at the end of every feeding, prompting her mom, […]
Read More - 15 August 2022Personalising Drug Prescriptions with Precision Medicine
Through proactive genetic testing and patient-centric initiatives, start-up company Nalagenetics is helping to make precision medicine a staple in clinical practice. In Singapore, nearly 1 in 10 people1 will react so negatively to a prescription medicine that they will need to be hospitalised for it. While many factors influence these adverse drug reactions, a […]
Read More - 06 July 2022Filling in the Book of Life’s Missing Chapters
Improvements in sequencing techniques have allowed researchers to completely map out the human genome, setting the stage for a more robust understanding of disease and treatment. When the Human Genome Project unveiled initial findings in the early 2000s, many experts and public commentators touted it as having written “the book of life”. After all, […]
Read More - 08 June 2022Will Genomics Help Make Healthcare More Equal?
In a recent online discussion by the NTU’s Institute of Science and Technology for Humanity, experts grappled with the complex consequences that genomics will have on healthcare and society. In the world of science, few initiatives have earned the same degree of across-the-board support and enduring effects as the Human Genome Project. First conceived […]
Read More - 04 May 2022Exploring the Ethics of Precision Medicine Research
For bioethics researcher Tamra Lysaght, proactive responses to public concerns about precision medicine could help encourage acceptance and participation in national programmes. Imagine you are inside a runaway trolley that is barrelling towards five people tied to the tracks ahead. Thankfully, you notice a lever which, if pulled, can divert the trolley to another […]
Read More - 27 April 2022Making the Sun Shine on a Greying Nation
A sociological study finds that HELIOS, Singapore’s most comprehensive and clinically-oriented biobank, lays the groundwork for using precision medicine to tackle diseases of ageing. Singapore is a rapidly ageing nation. Half of the population is over 42 years old, and in the next eight years, nearly a quarter of Singaporeans will be at least […]
Read More - 20 April 2022Spreading the Word about Research Bioethics
Engaging large and diverse groups of the public in discussions related to bioethics will ensure that biomedical research and related policies continue to benefit humanity. Did you know that moral practices in medicine date back to antiquity? One the first known documented examples, the Hippocratic Oath, describes the ethical responsibilities physicians have to […]
Read More - 13 April 2022Capturing Rare Connections with Cancer
Rare genetic mutations could contribute more strongly to telomere length and cancer-related risk than more common variants in the Singaporean-Chinese population. Thanks in large part to advances in modern medicine, humans are living longer than ever before. However, this extended lifespan has brought with it new health challenges—most prominently a rise in chronic diseases […]
Read More - 06 April 2022Levelling the Genomic Research Playing Field
Ethnic underrepresentation in genomic research leads to suboptimal healthcare for minority communities. What can be done to improve diversity in this field? In April 2003, the scientists working on the Human Genome Project published for the first time ever the full sequence of the human genome—a complete and detailed map of the entire […]
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