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Tag: news

The many faces of public engagement

Published on 18/08/201720/12/2017 by aidaherasLeave a comment

You’ve heard it before:

…The public have the right (and duty, some may say) to engage with science and medicine.

…Public engagement gives your work real-world context and a fresh perspective on what you do.

…If you are applying for funding, get ready to demonstrate your involvement with the public.

The many reasons why you should engage with the public have been listed and discussed plenty of times, so you already know what it’s about. You know it’s essential; you know it’s not just about communicating science, but about having a conversation; you know your audience has a voice and an active role to play – they’re not just spectators.

However, finding the time to dedicate to public engagement is no easy endeavour – even less so considering your already crammed schedule. Besides, interacting with school children and families at a science festival is not everybody’s cup of tea, and the risk of being forced into it can make your public engagement efforts become a ‘tick-box activity’.

But here’s the good news – public engagement comes in many more shapes than you may think. There’s a plethora of sometimes quirky, always wonderful initiatives out there to exemplify that engagement can take fascinating formats.

Even better news for those with overloaded schedules – sometimes it may be more effective to reach your audience remotely, which may allow more flexibility and make your life a little easier! In many cases your target audience won’t be the science fair type, after all, and picking the right medium to engage them is tightly related to the kind of audience they are. Ask yourself – how old are they? Where do they hang out, on- and off-line? What are their interests and motivations? What does their day-to-day life look like? Consideration of these factors is crucial before you embark on any public engagement journey!

Without further ado, here is a list of formats that showcase the many faces of public engagement…

Let your imagination be sparked!

  • At schools, colleges, community groups or science / family festivals. A well-known public engagement format for science and medicine, and no wonder – this can be a most gratifying way to participate. Contrary to what some think, people do want to know about your work and can be extremely engaged – you just need to find a way to tap into the curiosity of your particular audience.. Again, there is no one-size-fits-all. You could design an activity or inspire a crowd just by talking about your own journey in STEM and medicine.
  • At a music festival, your local mall, the pub or other unlikely places. By taking your activity to a place where people would not expect you can reach very different audiences, and can add an extra layer of fun to public engagement. Guerrilla Science managed to engage festival-goers at Glastonbury by challenging them to prove themselves smarter than a rat.
pexels-photo-264636
Could the confectionery aisle be the best spot to deploy your new activity on diabetes and metabolism?
  • At your own workplace. Instead of taking your experience and activities elsewhere, you could invite people to take part in an immersive experience at your institution. Organise a one-off careers event or even start a sustained engagement scheme between your institution and a selection of people. This gives them a chance to see what’s going on behind the scenes and have a feel of the day-to-day life of doctors, nurses or scientists.
  • Through public dialogue. As defined by the Research Council UK, public dialogue is a deliberative participatory engagement where the outcomes are used to inform decision-making. An example of this may be organising a focus group with patients in order to decide what the next step of your research should be. These initiatives can go really far –patients can even become the researchers!
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Collaborative projects with patients, artists and other collectives can lead to meaningful, long-standing engagement
  • Through broadcast media. Whether it’s an appearance on a TV, radio show or a podcast, this can be an effective way to reach out to the public. Your audience can participate by phone or social media, or there could be an associated event to enable them to have their say. Need tips on how to do TV or to work with journalists effectively? The Society can support you and point you in the right direction for training and useful resources.
  • Through written word. If you are a keen writer and enjoy the creativeness of the process you can apply those skills to engage your audience by telling them about your work. Write a blog or become a contributor for a website or magazine and spark a conversation with and amongst your readers.
  • By becoming a media ambassador for the Society. Regardless of the medium, collaboration between the worlds of science and journalism enables the responsible and clear reporting of science in the news.
pexels-photo-261949
Long gone are the days when endocrinology was badly reported in the news and you could do nothing about it!
  • Through Social Media. ‘Ask me anything’ sessions or Twitter takeovers are a great conversation-based way to engage with people – you just need access to the internet and a Reddit or Twitter account to get going!
  • Through art. Art and science aren’t opposites – they are both driven by curiosity, require creativity and both aim to gain a better understanding of the world. Collaborations between science and the arts range from films, theatre and exhibitions to dance, storytelling, comics and stand-up comedy.
  • Creating a resource. If you have the creative drive and the crafting skills but define yourself as a ‘behind the scenes’ sort of person, why not creating materials or activities for other people to use? Board games, mobile apps, activities for science festivals – you name it!
  • Through citizen science. Let people become your co-researchers to achieve common research goals, like collecting information on viral epidemiology, self-soothing, protein folding or mapping the human brain.
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In citizen science a crowd is a community of brilliant minds ready to chip in and help you achieve what may otherwise be unachievable!

Public engagement isn’t easy, but that doesn’t make it dreadful, inconvenient or disruptive. Rather, your challenge lies in approaching it creatively. If you have a passion for what you do, there will be a way to channel it into a public engagement activity – you just need to find the right fit for you and your public!

Aida de Heras, Society for Endocrinology Communications Executive.

The Society for Endocrinology is committed to public engagement by offering members training opportunities, public engagement resources and opportunities to get involved.

 

Categories Public Engagement•Tags challenges, current affairs, Education, Game, How To, media, news, science comms, Social Media, support

12 endocrine news stories that you may have missed in 2016

Published on 22/12/201622/12/2016 by Society for Endocrinology2 Comments

Part 1

2016 will go down as a landmark year in history. Amongst endless grant applications, journal submissions, clinics, lab work, teaching and everything else, you would be forgiven for not having enough time to read the news. But as the year winds down and you have a little more time to yourself, check out our top picks of endocrine news stories in 2016. In part one of three blog posts, we look at the period between January and April.

 

January: Man flu

Flu season has well and truly begun, and along with it, man-flu season.

jan-man-flu

It’s a common belief that colds hit men harder than women. Whether men simply exaggerate their suffering or actually experience worse symptoms is a subject of much debate. In February, research from the John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore revealed that the dreaded ‘manfluenza’ may not just be a product of our imagination. The culprit? Oestrogen – or, rather, men’s lack of it.

The study, published in the American Journal of Physiology – Lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology

revealed that woman may be protected from the worst of the flu by the female sex hormone oestrogen. Oestrogen dramatically slowed the replication of the influenza virus in nasal cells from women, but not men.

The biology is uncertain, but researchers believe it could be linked to oestrogen receptor Beta, which affects more than 30 genes involved in cell metabolism, slowing down viral replication. These receptors are sparsely present in male cells and may explain why oestrogen offered no protection in men’s nasal cells.

“If women are taking oestrogen-like hormones for other reasons, an added benefit might be less susceptibility to influenza during the flu season,” Klein says.

Media headlines causing a buzz this month:

Have scientists discovered the elixir of youth? Hormone ‘extends lifespan by 40%, protecting the immune system against the ravages of age’ (Daily Mail)

New guidelines for treatment of severe primary adrenal insufficiency symptoms (Endocrine Society)

IOC rules transgender athletes can take part in Olympics without surgery (The Guardian)

 

February: To gel or not to gel

For decades, men have been using testosterone gel with the hope it will improve their libido, energize and rejuvenate them. Some enthusiasts even label is the elixir of life. But so far there is very little data on the short term effects of testosterone supplementation on men’s health, and no long term data. Whether the decline in wellbeing is causally linked to low testosterone is unclear.

In February, the issue became clearer when a study revealed that testosterone has very modest effects on sexual function in older men who have very low testosterone. The landmark study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, is the largest randomised trial on testosterone replacement so far.

The men in the study reported “improved their sexual function, mood and depressive symptoms, and perhaps walking,” according to lead author Peter Snyder, an endocrinologist from the University Of Pennsylvania Perelman School Of Medicine.

The study did look at a specific group of men, all aged over 65, and all with particularly low testosterone (<9.5nmol/L).

“The findings don’t apply to younger men, or men with borderline low testosterone,” said Society for Endocrinology member Professor Frederick Wu.

So while we can’t say testosterone supplementation will make men feel young again, it might help in a small subgroup of older men who have low testosterone.

Media headlines causing a buzz this month:

Zika Virus a Global Health Emergency, W.H.O. Says (NYTimes)

A step closer to understanding fertilization (EurekAlert)

 

March: Winter babies

Maternal vitamin D is particularly important for babies born in winter, according to a study published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology.

We know from observational studies that mothers who have higher levels of vitamin D during pregnancy tend to have babies with higher bone mass. Until now, there have been no randomised placebo controlled trial to see if supplementing pregnant women with vitamin D can actually improve bone mass in their babies.

feb-bones

In this study more than a thousand women between 14 and 17 weeks pregnant either took a placebo, or vitamin D for the remainder of their pregnancy. When the researchers looked at the group as whole, they found no effect of maternal vitamin D supplementation on babies bone mass compared to placebo. However, amongst babies born in winter, maternal vitamin D supplementation did improve bone mass.

“Babies’ bones strengthen during the last stages of pregnancy. Since sunlight is our most important source of vitamin D, mothers’ levels of vitamin D tend to drop from summer to winter,” said Professor Nicholas Harvey from the University of Southampton.

“The trial has given us the first evidence that supplementing mothers with vitamin D during pregnancy counteracts the seasonal drop in maternal vitamin D levels and may help to ensure good bone development in these winter births,” he added.

Media headlines causing a buzz this month:

Mystery cancers are cropping up in children in aftermath of Fukushima (Science Mag)

Women who take HRT drugs soon after going through menopause are ‘less likely to suffer heart disease’ (Daily Mail)

Breast cancer sufferers could be spared chemotherapy. Cancer tumours are killed in 11 days with ‘staggering’ new therapy (The Telegraph)

 

April: “If it’s not a cancer, let’s not call it a cancer”

In one of the biggest endocrine stories 0f the year, a type of thyroid tumour is no longer classified as a cancer. As it turns out, certain types of tumours are encapsulated in impenetrable tissue and should not be classified as cancer. The tumour, known as encapsulated follicular variant of papillary thyroid carcinoma (EFVPTC), makes up 10-20% of all thyroid cancers diagnosed in Europe and North America.

march-cancer

Previously, people diagnosed with the non-threatening condition would have their entire thyroid removed, undergo treatment with radioactive iodine, and have regular check-ups for the rest of their lives. EFVPTC involves small abnormal lesions in the thyroid gland which look like cancer, but are completely contained by a fibrous capsule and unable to spread.

A group of 24 pathologists, two endocrinologists, a thyroid surgeon and a psychiatrist reviewed a hundred cases of patients with EFVPTC, who had the capsules removed but no further treatment. After 10 years, all patients with encapsulated tumours were cancer free.

The move means thousands of patients world-wide will be spared the diagnosis of cancer, avoiding excessive treatments and the psychological trauma of cancer diagnosis.

The new name for the lesion is NIFTP or “Nift-P” which stands for non-invasive follicular thyroid neoplasm with papillary-like nuclear features”. Pretty Nifty.

Media headlines causing a buzz this month:

Male contraceptive gel that ‘blocks sperm’ could be available in less than two years (The Independent)

The case against low-fat milk is stronger than ever (TIME)

New hormone regulates glucose (Nature)

Pancreatic cell transplantation: a breakthrough for type 1 diabetes? (Medical News Today)

Improving blood levels of vitamin D could decrease cancer risk according to results published in PLOS One (Medical News Today)

Hormone Therapy for Prostate Cancer Tied to Depression (NYTimes Blog)

Categories Public Engagement•Tags media, news

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