Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie

Now Ye're Talking - to a Research Scientist

Options
2»

Comments

  • Hosted Moderators Posts: 11,362 ✭✭✭✭Scarinae


    Thanks for doing this AMA, it is really interesting to read!
    Academia. It's a mix of short term contracts and longer ones. You'll rarely get anything longer than 2-3 years, and 1 year contracts are fairly common. In the past 18 months I've had three separate contracts!
    Does this have a big impact impact on planning stuff in your life, from large things like mortgage applications to smaller things like planning holidays? I'd also be interested to know what the competition is like for these contracts - do you ever worry that you won't find another one when your current one is up?

    I've heard a lot about trying to encourage more women into STEM fields, but it seems to me like the problem is more about keeping them there. Do you have any opinions on this? (again I'm not sure if you're male or female!)

    What is the most prestigious journal that you have been published in?


  • Registered Users Posts: 400 ✭✭mickmac76


    Do you think is there much fraud in science generally, how about your own field.

    Do the senior researchers get too much credit for the work done by more junior researchers.

    Whats the money like in your job. Does it increase at all from one post doc job to the next or do you have to wait for a permenant position for a pay increase.


  • Registered Users Posts: 8,321 ✭✭✭Gloomtastic!


    Have you ever cooked up something a bit naughty? ;)


    I know someone who has been so sick, for such a long time, that the amount of tablets she takes on a daily basis has worn away her esophegus. Why hasn't the pharmceutical industry (I'm thinking Chemist shops) developed individual perscriptions in milk shake form?


  • Registered Users Posts: 959 ✭✭✭Conchir


    Do you enjoy teaching? Are there any aspects of undergraduate teaching you'd like to change?


  • Registered Users Posts: 901 ✭✭✭xLisaBx


    I'm an undergrad in Biomedical Science, due to finish in June 2018 (if I stick it out :pac: ). Just wondering how you got into research? I'd love to do either a MD or PhD straight after finishing, but I'm really not sure, so any ideas would be appreciated :D


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 5,133 ✭✭✭Patty O Furniture


    Nope. A little shelving unit.

    Radio. Chargers. A bottle of water. Medicines. A book. Fairly standard things I think.



    From a general point of view, NASA/space stuff is fascinating. Some of their human based experiments in space are fascinating and are teaching everyone so much. Plus the discovery of other planets and solar systems... that's massive.

    In medical terms... I suppose the emergence of some of the new targeted therapies and biologics, allowing for a more tailored approach to treating illnesses (such as immunotherapy for cancers).

    The biggest problem though is antibiotic resistance. We really need a new strategy for that
    .

    Hi, thanks for taking part in the AMA, i don't know for how long?

    Who do you think is leading the way for immunotherapy for cancers, i heard there was some breakthru recently, but i assume it was probably a strain of it, as no doubt there are 100s of different types?

    How long do certain patents last for, no doubt big pharma will keep it indefinite?

    As i wonder where will this row end with the CF drug v the other costs that will be prevented from staying in hospital :confused:


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,639 ✭✭✭Sugar Free


    What's preventing you from going into industry? Love of your current job/fear there might not be something similar or challenging enough?

    If you did, what area would you be interested in? Clinical pharmacology, assay development, discovery etc. or something broader like product development?

    Do you have any opinion on the push for more TQT waivers and the use of pooled ECG data in drug development?

    Any opinion on the Orkambi issue?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,744 ✭✭✭diomed


    How do you know that what you are working on is not being worked on by others, or if others are working on it how do you know that you have a chance of success before the competitors?


  • Company Representative Posts: 23 Verified rep I'm a Research Scientist, AMA


    xLisaBx wrote: »
    I'm an undergrad in Biomedical Science, due to finish in June 2018 (if I stick it out :pac: ). Just wondering how you got into research? I'd love to do either a MD or PhD straight after finishing, but I'm really not sure, so any ideas would be appreciated :D

    Do you mean masters? MD is an entirely different qualification. An MD is a research degree that a medical doctor does after their medical qualification.

    As for getting into research, I applied for a PhD position that was advertised in college. But not a huge amount of posts are externally advertised. They are either filled in house by the PI based on students they taught, or through word of mouth.

    You're in 3rd year now? Have you completed any lab based internships during your summers? Note I didn't do these. I spent my summers travelling. But over the recent years we've had an increasing number of undergraduate students requesting internships to give their cv a boost. If your uni offers them, no harm in applying.

    The next piece of advice I would give is to talk to lecturers whose work interests you, and ask if they think they will have any positions opening in their lab. Also ask if they would be interested in being your mentor if you were to write a grant to secure your own funding.

    If you're going the "write your own grant" route, or even before accepting a position, make enquiries about the lecturer and their attitude towards PhD students (how hands on they are).

    The other benefit to an internship is that it gives you an idea of lab life. But your fourth year project will do that too, and if your supervisor has funding AND think you'll be a good fit for the lab, they'll likely offer you the position.


  • Company Representative Posts: 23 Verified rep I'm a Research Scientist, AMA


    Scarinae wrote: »
    Thanks for doing this AMA, it is really interesting to read!


    Does this have a big impact impact on planning stuff in your life, from large things like mortgage applications to smaller things like planning holidays? I'd also be interested to know what the competition is like for these contracts - do you ever worry that you won't find another one when your current one is up?

    I've heard a lot about trying to encourage more women into STEM fields, but it seems to me like the problem is more about keeping them there. Do you have any opinions on this? (again I'm not sure if you're male or female!)

    What is the most prestigious journal that you have been published in?

    Short term contracts seriously impact your ability to plan. Ultimately the rent needs to be paid, so there's always anxiety when signing a new lease that your 6 month contract that ends before your 9 month lease isn't going to get renewed, and then you're stuck. Mortgages are pretty much out of the question too, depending on circumstances. I'm single, so with only one unstable income, there's no way I can get a mortgage. I do have friends who are co-habiting/married who are on short term contracts and who have mortgages, but they're more "stable" as there are two incomes. It's hard though. Combined with the issue of a housing shortage (very few research jobs outside of the cities) and inability to get a mortgage, it leaves a pretty grim outlook.

    On the outside we're professionals, however on our salaries its next to impossible to afford somewhere that's within a reasonable distance to commute to work, that isn't a horrible house, and there's no way you could afford to live alone and save for the day that you might actually get mortgage approval.

    As for holidays... it depends. For big holidays/events, we schedule experiments around them. There's a certain degree of flexibility - we know when we want to go on holidays and then work back from there. You can manipulate experiments so that they fit around your life, but that might mean later evenings/weekend work. It's swings and roundabouts really.

    There's competition for jobs for sure. However lots of positions aren't really advertised - grants are written with specific people in mind. There tends to be a bit of flexibility/leeway with positions, but if you're moving labs you'll need to put the ground work in if you're an established postdoc. It's quite political! And there's nothing as vicious as academic politics.

    --
    There's a huge issue when it comes to women in STEM in research. Obviously there's the whole "tick tock" thing, which has a bigger effect on women than men. Typically women finish their PhD when they're 26-28, which is prime baby making time. But gaps on your CV are hard to explain. There's also no maternity benefit available. Many women end up leaving the lab to have children, and they either struggle to get back in, or they never go back. There were incentives by SFI a few years back to get women to apply for grants, but I haven't seen that scheme run again. Choosing between career and family is a bigger issue for women than it is for men (unfortunately, not trying to be a feminist) - simply because they need to leave the workplace to have babies.
    --
    Depends on what you mean by prestigious :pac:

    In terms of impact factor, think the highest of a paper I'm on is 8.3 or something. As first author my highest is 4.5. But that's off the top of my head, I haven't checked in a while and I actually forget where some of my papers have been published :o

    My work has also featured in popular science magazines, newspapers, childrens books and also in TV shows.


  • Advertisement
  • Company Representative Posts: 23 Verified rep I'm a Research Scientist, AMA


    Have you ever cooked up something a bit naughty? ;)


    I know someone who has been so sick, for such a long time, that the amount of tablets she takes on a daily basis has worn away her esophegus. Why hasn't the pharmceutical industry (I'm thinking Chemist shops) developed individual perscriptions in milk shake form?

    It depends on your definition of naughty ;)

    Without thinking too hard about it I could get: mdma, ecstacy, ketamine, cannabinoids... because they're used for various reasons in research. They're all really controlled and really regulated, but no cooking needs to be done ;)

    The worst I have done... I was doing an experiment that required everything to be food grade (it was for an in vivo study). We had some food grade ethanol left over, so we may have used that for non-work purposes. Oh and we brewed our own beer in the fixed temperature room.

    I'd be curious to hear more about the tablets burning through the esophegus. I can nerd it up and answer your question, but I don't want to dazzle you with science :pac:

    Basically it depends on the drug. There are lots of different targets for drugs within the body. There are so, so, so many factors to consider, particularly when taking tablets orally. Acid stability. Digestibility stability for pepsin, bile, trypsin, chymotrypsin. pH activity. Target within the intestines. Mechanical stability/shear. There's no "one size fits all" for drugs - which is why some are capsules, some are liquid, some are gel caps, some are powder, some are soluble, some are injected, some go under the tongue.... I could continue. Drug delivery is almost as important as drug discovery.

    One relatively well known example: probiotics (we'll leave the debate as to whether they're a drug or not to another forum ;) ). We see everywhere that activia yoghurt contains 9 million lactobacillis bifidus digestivus (or whatever it's called) and all of the assosciated health benefits, but what nobody sees is the "best results seen when two portions are eaten together", because the pH in the stomach is so harsh that the bacteria don't survive. If there are a) more bacteria and b) more protein present, the pH will stay higher for longer, giving the probiotic a better chance of getting to the duodenum.

    (I did my PhD on digestion, specifically drug stability during digestion)

    One thing she could consider is asking for the medication in suppository form. That can help. It's not pleasant but it's quicker acting and most drugs have a target in the rectal cavity.


  • Company Representative Posts: 23 Verified rep I'm a Research Scientist, AMA


    Conchir wrote: »
    Do you enjoy teaching? Are there any aspects of undergraduate teaching you'd like to change?

    I had a massive reply written for this by I had technical issues. Bear with me and I'll re-write later.

    But yes I enjoy it and there is lots I would change!


  • Company Representative Posts: 23 Verified rep I'm a Research Scientist, AMA


    Sugar Free wrote: »
    What's preventing you from going into industry? Love of your current job/fear there might not be something similar or challenging enough?

    If you did, what area would you be interested in? Clinical pharmacology, assay development, discovery etc. or something broader like product development?

    Do you have any opinion on the push for more TQT waivers and the use of pooled ECG data in drug development?

    Any opinion on the Orkambi issue?

    It's a combination of things really. I love my job. I enjoy the variety and I enjoy the little sense of freedom. If I have a thought I can try it out in my own time. A friend who works in industry has to fill out a report if an experiment doesn't work. I understand that that's how it has to be, but I think I would find it difficult to adjust to. Also I set myself career goals/targets to reach before I made a call on my future.

    If I were to go into industry I would like to have some involvement in the clinical side of things, perhaps in terms of the design of clinical studies and perhaps trial recruitment.

    No opinion on tqt waivers, it's not something that I have ever encountered. However a quick read up on it and I can see where the ideas came from. Obviously I can't comment in a professional capacity, but having worked with human subjects in studies the variances are staggering. To try preserve some anonymity I will avoid too much detail, however for certain studies we did there was a massive difference in baseline levels of what we were measuring. Many pre-clinical studies take place under strictly controlled conditions, particularly when they're animal based. Here, everything is controlled. Food. Water. Sleep. Light. Exercise. The risk of environmental causes of anomalies is reduced.

    Compare that to the more realistic approach to trials/studies. We're human. That extra cup of coffee that we had could have given us palpitations. We may be under stress. We might be fighting a cold. We might be tired. We might even have done more exercise in the past few days. Or we might have accidentally forgotten we were in a study and gone to the chemist and bought a remedy without checking potential side effects or interactions.

    Any number of these things could cause a blip in cardiac monitoring, so I can see the theory behind pooling data.

    However I'd need to read more on it to decide my views.

    Orkambi. That right there is a can of worms. I think I'll need to have a think about how to word my response on it and read a bit more into it before I commit to answering, sorry! Bit outside of my knowledge.


  • Company Representative Posts: 23 Verified rep I'm a Research Scientist, AMA


    Hi, thanks for taking part in the AMA, i don't know for how long?

    Who do you think is leading the way for immunotherapy for cancers, i heard there was some breakthru recently, but i assume it was probably a strain of it, as no doubt there are 100s of different types?

    How long do certain patents last for, no doubt big pharma will keep it indefinite?

    As i wonder where will this row end with the CF drug v the other costs that will be prevented from staying in hospital :confused:

    Immunotherapy for cancer has huge potential to turn cancer into a life limiting condition rather than the current situation we're in. I'm biased in terms of who I think will lead the way, but GSK seem to be making the right noises currently.

    Don't understand your second question, sorry!

    And see previous response on orkambi!


  • Company Representative Posts: 23 Verified rep I'm a Research Scientist, AMA


    diomed wrote: »
    How do you know that what you are working on is not being worked on by others, or if others are working on it how do you know that you have a chance of success before the competitors?

    Quite simply, you don't know what your competitors are working on. Yeah you have a fair idea from attending conferences and networking, but you won't know for sure until you read the paper.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,128 ✭✭✭dellas1979


    Not sure this thread is still alive (but can still post).

    I was just wondering, where do you stand on pharma companies making drugs and making money off the "rich".

    i.e., drugs are made so that pharma companies make money. So where do your morals stand on this? Or do you think about this? There are many diseases out there not researched as there will be no money to be made.


  • Registered Users Posts: 880 ✭✭✭celica00


    Hiya,

    i havent read all pages yet so hope this wasnt asked before :)
    1) When would you consider someone being resistant to antibiotics? (what factors).- i.e. person takes antibiotics at least once a year, Eats meat. Or antibiotics simply dont work when taken etc.
    2) If a person never takes them or once in every few years,, would they be still more responding to it?
    3) are babies born with that resistancy or is it just down to the life-time factors?
    4) Does your field/work include testing on animals? 
    5) What do you think about natural remedies?

    Hope thats ok to ask :)
    Thanks!!


  • Company Representative Posts: 23 Verified rep I'm a Research Scientist, AMA


    dellas1979 wrote: »
    Not sure this thread is still alive (but can still post).

    I was just wondering, where do you stand on pharma companies making drugs and making money off the "rich".

    i.e., drugs are made so that pharma companies make money. So where do your morals stand on this? Or do you think about this? There are many diseases out there not researched as there will be no money to be made.

    Disclaimer: This is more of a personal opinion than a view of a research scientist.

    Morally, it's a tricky one.

    I purposefully avoid looking at how much drugs are marketed for. As mentioned previously, drug discovery/production can run into billions from bench to bedside. If you have what is deemed to be an "orphan illness", not a lot of research will be done on a treatment/cure. It's harsh, but it's not economically viable. Another factor to consider is that if it's a lesser known illness, there won't be enough patients for there to be a meaningful clinical study performed. There is also the risk assosciated with a drug working in the lab but not translating to humans. And the risk/reward aspect of things. And the quality/quantity of life.

    If you had a terminal illness but could take a drug that would prolong your life, would you take it? If it was to prolong your life before the end stage of illness took hold, it's a bit of a no-brainer; however if it was to prolong your life when the illness has taken over such that you've no quality of life, would you extend your suffering?

    If there was a cure developed for an illness but it cost 1 million euro a year for you to take, could you afford to pay for it? If you couldn't afford to pay, who should pay? The government? That's well and good, but when you look at what 1 million euro could get in terms of treating other illnesses, is it better to treat one person or 20? Would your health insurance cover it? If so, would others premiums rise as a result? And if that happened would less people take on insurance and then put the health system under further pressure?

    Millions, if not billions, of funding has gone into researching a treatment for MND. There have been numerous discoveries in the lab in terms of potential therapeutics. Not a single one has had any significant impact on the lives of patients. Should money be moved from researching MND to something else instead? I mean it's clearly not benefitting any MND patients.... (That's not meant to be harsh - it's just an opinion)

    There's no right or wrong answer.

    And then we come to the statins, the blood pressure medication, the anti-anxiety pills, the anti-depressants - they're still being researched, despite there already being treatment on the market. Should they stop research into these new therapeutics, when they might only reduce side effects for patients? Is it better to spend money reducing side effects, and potentially reducing costs of treating those side effects? Or is it better to research these drugs to market them and be able to make more money from patents, in order to fund more research into other illnesses?

    It's more than a simple "making money from the rich" unfortunately.


  • Company Representative Posts: 23 Verified rep I'm a Research Scientist, AMA


    celica00 wrote: »
    Hiya,

    i havent read all pages yet so hope this wasnt asked before :)
    1) When would you consider someone being resistant to antibiotics? (what factors).- i.e. person takes antibiotics at least once a year, Eats meat. Or antibiotics simply dont work when taken etc.
    2) If a person never takes them or once in every few years,, would they be still more responding to it?
    3) are babies born with that resistancy or is it just down to the life-time factors?
    4) Does your field/work include testing on animals?
    5) What do you think about natural remedies?

    Hope thats ok to ask :)
    Thanks!!

    This is more of a science question than a question related to life as a research scientist, but I'll answer.

    1, 2, 3) Antibiotic resistance relates to the bacteria rather than the individual. The bacteria mutates/evolves to gain resistance to the antibiotic - the person, by and large, doesn't really impact things. Obviously a person with a better immune system will have a better chance at fighting off a bacterial infection, but antibiotic resistance relates to the bacteria.

    4) My field - yes. My own work? No. We collaborate with people who will do the animal experiments if required.

    5) There is a huge debate on natural remedies. I am of the same opinion as Dara O'Briain - if something is a natural remedy, it becomes a medicine. I think there is a huge risk assosciated with certain natural remedies (eg interactions with conventional medicines such as St Johns Wort) or where people see natural remedies as an alternative solution and end up in a worse situation (such as people trying to cure bacterial meningitis with homeopathic remedies, resulting in the death of their child). If natural remedies work for you - go for it. But be aware that a huge amount of homeopathic/natural remedies are at best, placebo driven.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,034 ✭✭✭garancafan


    Regarding natural remedies - is snake oil polyunsaturated?


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 479 ✭✭mikeoneilly


    There was a drug trial in the UK that went badly wrong some years back and some recipients nearly died.

    It seemed crazy in hindsight that they were all given the drug simultaneously as they became ill very soon after.

    There was no proper planning in place either to deal with possible side-effects and what they might be and treatment of same.

    What's your own thoughts on human drug trials and have things improved?


  • Boards.ie Employee Posts: 12,597 ✭✭✭✭✭Boards.ie: Niamh
    Boards.ie Community Manager


    It's time to close this one up - thank you so much to our research scientist guest for some very insightful and educational answers to your questions!
    We'll have another AMA up soon - if you'd like to apply for one yourself, you can do so here.


This discussion has been closed.
Advertisement