Categories
Uncategorized

SCWIST IWIS Cafe Scientifique event on May 31st, 2012

Posted on behalf of SCWIST IWIS

Are Stem Cells the Future of Modern Medicine?

Speakers: Dr. Fabio Rossi and Dr. Jackie Damen

Ever wondered what stem cells really are? Why are they important in biomedical research? Which diseases could stem cell really cure? How close is this research to treating patients? Patients on organ transplant lists, as well as those with diabetes and heart disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, MS, developmental deficiencies, and many others could benefit from stem cell research.

Please join us for exciting and stimulating speeches and question and answers.

In addition, food will be provided.

Please find the attached poster for further information: CIHR_CafeScientifique_may31_Stemcells-1

Sincerely,

Your IWIS Team.

Categories
Uncategorized

Upcoming Event: Seeing is Believing Part 3, May 29th

LSI Cafe Scientifique

Categories
Uncategorized

May Café Scientifique

Dear Café Scientifiquers,

 

Our May café will happen on Tuesday May 22th, 7:30pm at The Railway Club. Our speaker for the evening will be Andrew Holding, a research scientist who is currently employed by the Medical Research Council (MRC) in the Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK. He has worked on many Science outreach projects including founding and organising Skeptics in the Pub in Cambridge, which holds monthly talks by various speakers with the aim of highlighting the application of critical thinking and scientific method. His talk will be:

 

Forgotten Knowledge: The discovery and loss of a cure for scurvy

 

Of all the slang names for the British, none is more iconic than ‘Limey’. While the the term provokes majestic images of the Golden Age of Sail, scurvy cost countless sailors and seamen their lives. It was once not unheard of for nine out of every ten members of a ship’s crew to have succumbed to scurvy by the time it returned to port. The results of James Lind’s work on the HMS Salisbury in 1747, which led to a cure, without doubt saved innumerable lives. Yet in Cherry-Garrard’s account of Robert Falcon Scott’s 1911 expedition to the South Pole, he writes: “There was little scurvy in Nelson’s days; but the reason is not clear, since, according to modern research, lime-juice only helps to prevent it.” So why did Lind’s results get forgotten?

Spam prevention powered by Akismet