Social Innovation

Cosmic dust, naysayers and other science stories of the week

David Gleicher
Head of Science and Society, World Economic Forum Geneva
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Future of Global Health and Healthcare

Welcome to your weekly science update, a curated list of the week’s most interesting stories in science.

Gravitational waves discovery is dust – the 2014 claims of evidence of gravitational waves, signals from the Big Bang that would have settled longstanding disputes about the nature of the universe, was officially put to rest – it was just cosmic dust.

British members of parliament voted yes to mitochondrial replacement therapy to prevent incurable genetic disease. While it has been hailed as a triumph in genetic medicine, media headlines calling this the dawn of “three-parent babies” are ruffling feathers, and religious institutions have come out against the procedure. More on how it works here.

A former EU Chief Science Adviser tells all her three years in Brussels “contained elements of Quixote, Kafka and Macondo”.

President Obama’s science budget for the fiscal year 2016 increases funds for science by 6% to $146 billion, but political reactions suggest it won’t get congressional support as is. Some scientists criticized the budget as favouring funding for applied over basic science, but all agree it’s a vast improvement. Here’s POTUS explaining the value of basic science.

More and better treatments for cancer. President Obama’s budget includes a special Precision Medicine Initiative, which has its supporters and naysayers. Here’s a portrait of what’s at stake.

Antibiotic resistance – the Obama budget request nearly doubles spending on antibiotic-resistance programmes. Here’s the Wellcome Trust’s Jeremy Farrar on why we’ll need more than science to solve this problem.

Meanwhile, in a galaxy surprisingly not far far away…

To some, public health appears overrated. Measles, once eradicated in the US, is now back and spreading with a vengeance thanks to the growing popularity of the anti-vaccine movement.

This begs the larger question: why do some people doubt science?

And the evidence is in: US scientists and public can pretty much agree to disagree.

Professor Robert Langer of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and member of the Global Agenda Council on Nanotechnology, has won the £1 million Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering for his development of drug-release systems, tissue-building and microchip implants.

Author: David Gleicher is Senior Programme Manager, Science and Technology, at the World Economic Forum.

Image: The Gulf of Mexico and US Gulf Coast at sunset is shown in this image from the International Space Station and posted to social media on December 14, 2014. REUTERS/Terry Virts/NASA/Handout

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Social InnovationFourth Industrial RevolutionEmerging Technologies
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