
On this edition, we speak with Jim Wells, director of the Small Molecule Discovery Center at the Univeristy of California, San Francisco. Wells recently coauthored an editorial for the journal Science about the need for scientists to work with advocacy groups to accelerate public awareness in support of basic research. He points to the success former vice president Al Gore has had in raising awareness around climate change and global warming and sees in that a populist model that could help bring in new support for biomedical research at a critical time of spreading disease and when our genomic understanding remains in its infancy.
For much of his adult life, Robert Helms worked as a professional medical test subject. He chronicled his experiences, and that of others, in his zine Guinea Pig Zero. Excerpts of the publication are available in the book Guinea Pig Zero: An Anthology of the Journal for Human Research Subjects. “When I rent my healthy body to medical science, I am the temporary employee of a research team, paid as a contractor for each job. I do my bleeding, pissing work in a blurry area between patient and subject. This blurry area has made for intense public debate, and the questions relating to the guinea pig as a worker are not even considered by lawmakers in this country (yet they are in Canada or France)." We spoke to Helms about his career choice, the day to day lives of professional guinea pigs, and the role of human test subjects in modern medical science.
On this edition, we travel to San Diego for the BIO 2008 International Convention, the largest annual gathering for the biotechnology industry. We’ll begin with BIO president and CEO Jim Greenwood, who talks about why the industry is lobbying to get more money for the folks who regulate it. We’ll also speak with Ed Holmes, executive deputy chairman for Clinical-Translational Sciences at the Biomedical Research Council of the Agency for Science, Technology and Research or A*STAR about Singapore’s efforts to become a biotechnology powerhouse. Amgen’s Senior Vice Present of Research and Development Joe Miletich discusses both the art and science of early stage research. And we finish with Deloitte’s National Managing Principal for Biotechnology Matthew Hudes on measuring innovation.
On this edition, Tjols' editor-in-chief William Patrick is joined by Jaxon White, chairman of Medmarc Insurance Group, and Dr. David Dale, president of the American College of Physicians. They discuss the recent U.S. Supreme Court decision on liability for medical device makers and the need for greater research into the medicinal uses of marijuana.