Showing posts with label Uganda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Uganda. Show all posts

Friday, 21 August 2015

Can flies do the magic?

This is the unedited version of the article recently published on The Guardian. I want to put it out because a) this is much more me than what was published; b) I think the story of how DrosAfrica was baked is more clear here, even though it was tough to fit it in 800 words; and c) because I insisted they credited some people and groups and they did not, so I have to do it myself.
They say living in Cambridge will change your life, and it definitively changed mine. It is not just the gorgeous buildings and the historic atmosphere. The thrilling scientific community and the endless opportunities for brainstorming and collaboration make science run at a different pace. People are open, collaborative and willing to help in a way I have not seen anywhere else. In 2011, three Spanish researchers with a Cambridge connection jumped to the opportunity to volunteer-teach in a Drosophila neurogenetics workshop1. Upon setting foot on Ishaka2 it was clear that there is an enormous human potential in African universities that is mostly underutilised. We think a small dipteran can contribute to the solution.

Drosophila melanogaster has been instrumental for the birth of the fields of Developmental Biology and Genetics and is an important tool in most areas of Biomedical research. Beyond that, flies are an invaluable tool for teaching research, the scientific method and critical thinking. Drosophila transformed the scientific scene in Spain decades ago, when the limited resources called for an inexpensive laboratory model. We believe these flies can empower the scientists of Africa to pursue their research interests.

African Biomedical scientists face important challenges, mainly poor training, poorer infrastructure and scarce resources, national and international, dedicated to research. In this context, most of the researches done in the area are epidemiological studies or are limited by the use of rats as laboratory model. None of these methodologies addresses the cellular and molecular events underlying physiological processes or diseases, neither do they teach junior scientists the drills of hypothesis-driven science. As a result, the African research agenda is mostly set by well-intended funders who live far away from the African reality. The local researchers are most often ignored, sometimes used as a token in “collaborative” grants. Those on ground have little-to-no decision-making power and the biggest part of the resources return to “the West”, where they originated.

In 2012, I moved to Uganda to work on the establishment of a research lab in KIU Western Campus3. Yes, resources are scarce and recruiting qualified staff is mission impossible. Yes, the lab is dusty because we don't even have adequate windows. But picture this. A Nigerian Pharmacologist, a Spanish developmental Biologist and a Ugandan Pharmacy student are standing around a cracked bench. They are discussing the best experimental design to test the long-term effects of repeated exposure to particular drugs, using flies. The scene happens in 2015 in a small town in Western Uganda. Only two years before, the mzungu4 of Ishaka had organized a workshop5 with the help of some friends and some willing strangers, on the use of Drosophila melanogaster for Biomedical research. The West African was the most senior academician among the participants of that workshop. The East African was mid-way in her degree and had no idea of what was flying in that lab upstairs.

In 2013, the three Spanish researchers founded DrosAfrica6 and set to train a community of researchers that can use Drosophila to investigate their Biomedical questions. In the two workshops held at KIU Western Campus we have trained 27 people (17 Nigerians, 3 Kenyans, and 4 Ugandans; 20 of them KIU members, 7 coming from outside). Nowadays, our alumni are using Drosophila for their PhD projects and leading budding Drosophila-research groups in Uganda and Nigeria. We have also established contact with other institutions and 2016 should be full of activity.

Raising funds for any capacity building event is a big challenge. Cooperation agencies want clean water for all, the cure for malaria or the solution to pandemics, but forget to build the capacity that will enable African scientists to compete for research funds to study African problems. The few agencies that fund workshops will give small amounts that will partially cover expenses. If we do not cover travelling costs for participants, we will be limited to the local audience. Luckily, KIU had attracted an international population for us to work with and our initial efforts can expand with the return home of our alumni.

Two years after the first workshop we have an established research group producing graduates who have done high quality research with their own hands without leaving the continent, and our alumni are training others on the ground. We want to do more workshops. We want to establish fly-rooms all over Sub-Saharan Africa. The resources needed to start up a fly lab are small and the deep knowledge about fly development, together with the numerous genetic tools available allow for elegant and profound discoveries to be made.

We think that Drosophila is a suitable model to be used by African researchers. May the flies lead the take off of African Biomedical research...

1The Drosophila neurogenetics course. Uganda 2011 was organized by Lucía Prieto Godino and Sadiq Yusuf.

2Ishaka town is located in the Bushenyi District in the region of Western Uganda

3Kampala International University Western Campus houses the Health Sciences and a few other degrees in the area of Humanities.

4 mzungu is the Swahili term for a person who travels, and has stuck in the common language as a word, a shout, for white and pale people in general

5The workshop was funded by the Cambridge-Africa Alborada Research Fund, TWAS, EMBO, Sayansi Research for Development and the philanthropic contribution of FRS Tony Kouzarides (Gurdon Institute, Cambridge, UK).

6 Marta Vicente-Crespo, Isabel Palacios and María Dolores Martín Bermudo are the co-founders of DrosAfrica. Tim Weill and Silvia Muñoz-Descalzo are Directors of this initiative.

Tuesday, 21 April 2015

Uganda: an Overview

(I wrote this for work but I think it still fits the theme of this blog and since I don’t write much outside of work these days, I am doing some recycling here)

Kampala is the heart of Uganda. Everything that happens in Uganda, at some point, touches Kampala. A visit to Old Kampala makes for a perfect test for the tourist’ appetites: if one can take the overpopulated streets, the crowded shops, the chaotic old taxi park, the still traffic jam that disappears when the traffic officers release their block at the neighbouring roundabout, then one can say that is ready to see the real Uganda.

Initially built on seven hills, the now-more-than-seven hills that Kampala covers make it hard to move around on foot, but gives the opportunity to enjoy tremendous views from places like the Catholic cathedral or the upper roads of Makindye. Tourists can get a more relaxed shopping experience at the Garden City and Oasis malls after a less hectic walk through the hill of Nakasero, land of government buildings and big hotels.

The neighbouring Entebbe makes for a more relaxed destination if only one day is available or if the visitor has some spare hours before their flight. A walk through the Botanical Gardens, a guided tour through the town, daily excursion to observe some hard-to-see birds or a boat transfer to the island where the chimpanzees have found refuge are all worthy. Transfers from the old taxi park in Kampala cost three to five thousand Ugandan Shillings depending on the luggage. A special hire can be around 70000 UGX depending on oil prices.

The possibilities of Uganda as a tourist destination are enormous. Less exploited than Kenya and Tanzania, it also offers unique jewels not present in the neighbouring safari destinations. South Western Uganda is the best place to visit the endangered mountain gorilla. Housing half of the world’s living mountain gorillas, Uganda is the safest country to experience the amazing gorilla tracking. The permits are expensive to protect this species of which there are less that a thousand animals.

No less spectacular are the landscapes and wildlife of the most popular park, the Queen Elizabeth National Park, and the largest in extension, the Murchison Falls National Park. Situated in Western and North Western Uganda respectively, the parks offer the possibility of seeing the big mammals - lions, elephants, buffaloes - and even crocodiles, leopards and hyenas. The diversity of antelope species, the elegance of the giraffes and the beauty of the falls make the Northern park worth the ride. A spectacular boat ride full of close sights, and the magnificent views of the crater area make for a distinct visit at the Queen’s land. Oh! The Queen Elizabeth Park also contains great diversity of birds for those who love looking up.

A favourite to those who enjoy quieter spaces is the only spot in Uganda where one can see zebra, Lake Mburo National Park. Located ten kilometers South from the main road on the way from Kampala to Mbarara, this small park is house to the only equine that survives well in this land and to some picturesque antelope species as well as to the popular warthog. The lake is another jewel for bird watching and camping by the hippo-populated waters is a fabulous experience.

Kampala

Kampala is the capital city of Uganda and concentrates most of the public infrastructures of the country. The city is well connected with all other regions of the country and is the center of national economic and social activity.

Recent reports from the World Bank point out the improvement in the operations of the Kampala City Council, specially after the introduction of a zero tolerance policy for corruption. Several roads have been widened and the pavement improved, including sidewalks on one or two sides and bumps to reduce traffic speed which increase pedestrian security. The overall traffic has improved since the completion of the Northern bypass and is expected to benefit from the construction of the ramification at the West entrance in direction Entebbe.

In partnership with international corporations the City Council is implementing a project to develop an Integrated Solid Waste Management system for Kampala which shall enhance recycling, increase collection, generate energy from waste and set up a new processing facility to avoid concentration of residues.

Kampala is home to Makerere University, East Africa’s first university. A hub of research institutes have sprouted from the original institution like the Infectious Disease Institute. The internationally renowned Uganda Virus Research Institute also sits in the nearby Entebbe, and the six National Agricultural Research Institutes (NARIS), the Uganda Industrial Research Institute (UIRI), and the Presidential Initiative on Banana Industrial Development (PIBID), employ a number of scientists that work for the country’s research priorities.

Some useful tips

Arrivals by air: arrivals to Entebbe airport by the following and other companies:

  • British Airways has flights leaving London every Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday; returns leave Entebbe on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday;

  • Brussels Airways has flights leaving Brussels every Monday, Wednesday and Saturday; returns leave Entebbe on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday;

  • Kenyan Airlines has five flights operating daily between Nairobi and Entebbe (schedule depends on the day of the week);

  • Ethiopian Airlines has two flights operating daily between Addis Ababa and Entebbe;

  • Rwandar Air also flies every day between Kigali and Entebbe;

  • Fly Emirates has two daily morning flights from Dubai to Entebbe and one afternoon flight to return to Dubai;

  • Egypt Air runs daily flights, either with its own crafts or using partner companies like South African Airways.

For affordable tickets http://edreams.com, or http://expedia.com and other travel searching engines can be useful.

Transfers from the airport can be hired in advance or at arrival. Licensed taxi drivers will stand up at the arrivals door and will offer their service. Note that a ride to Kampala can cost between seventy and a hundred thousand depending on the final destination. Most hotels in Entebbe, even the backpackers hostel, offer airport transfers somewhere between free and some 25000 UGX, depending on the accommodation rate.

Transfers to Kampala by public transport are done by matatu, small vans licensed to carry up to 14 passengers. The price can go from three to five thousand with one piece of luggage.

Connection by land can be done with some bus companies like:

  • Easycoach, Kampala Coach, and Mash for Kenya

  • Mash and Jaguar go to Rwanda

  • Kalita goes to Tanzania

Buses stop in Old or Central Kampala depending on the company. Hotels in those areas tend to be noisy, but can be convenient if an early or late bus is to be boarded.

More tips on getting there and away can be found here.

Thursday, 1 August 2013

Science For Development

Big news for science in Uganda!!! A group from Mbarara University and a team led by the University of Valencia (Spain) which includes participation of the Kampala International University Western Campus are among the awardees of the Saving Lives at Birth. Science for development can also be done in Africa. Yeeeeaaaaaaahhhhhh!!!!!

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Saturday, 15 June 2013

It's Friday Again

Last night (a few weeks ago now that I finally get to publish this) I was sitting on my couch, tired after playing a bit of basketball with people that are much younger, much stronger, and in much better shape than I am, and I realized that I was hearing loud music; the kind of music you would hear in a disco around here. “Of course”, I thought, “It's Thursday, and we are in a (tiny) university town.

Today is Friday, indeed, and our Nigerians put on their traditional clothes...

Tuesday, 30 April 2013

Anyone with Wellcome Trust Funds for this call?

International Engagement Awards

Funding for public engagement with Wellcome Trust research in low- and middle-income countries.

(a very important matter with very little support otherwise – we have a good relationship established with a local radio station and BBC Africa would probably be interested in getting on board if the opportunity comes; this is us http://shs.kiu.ac.ug/index.php/institute-of-biomedical-research/about-the-institute)

What are the Awards

The International Engagement Awards have been relaunched after the success of the previous scheme. The scheme has been refocused to award projects that are linked to Wellcome Trust-funded research.

International Engagement Awards are for projects that support Wellcome Trust-funded researchers in low- and middle-income countries to:

  • engage with the public and policy makers
  • strengthen capacity to conduct public engagement with biomedical science and health research
  • stimulate dialogue about research and its impact on the public in a range of community and public contexts
  • promote collaboration on engagement projects between researchers and community or public organisations.

Projects could engage:

  • communities and members of the public (particularly those affected by or involved in biomedical and health research)
  • science communicators, health and science journalists
  • healthcare professionals, educators, field workers, community workers
  • policy and decision makers.

The audience for the project, and the engagement activity, must be in a low- or middle-income country.

If you are interested in conducting research into the effectiveness of science communication or engagement, you may be interested in our Ethics and Society schemes.

How do I apply?

To be eligible, you must be either:

  • directly funded by the Wellcome Trust (as a researcher, research group or institution); or
  • working with a researcher, research group, institution or consortium directly funded by the Wellcome Trust.

We encourage informal discussions about potential project ideas before you submit an application, although we cannot review draft applications.

To apply for a grant of up to £30 000 for up to three years, complete a preliminary application form and submit it to the Trust by the date indicated under the ‘Deadlines’ tab.

We will assess preliminary applications for eligibility, their link to Trust-funded research and the quality of the proposed engagement project. If your preliminary application is successful, we will invite you to make a full application.

Please note that applications that do not have an appropriate link to Trust-funded research will not be accepted. Such links must be agreed with the Trust-funded grantholder in advance of submission.

Final decisions will be made approximately five months after the preliminary application deadline.

Larger grants of more than £30 000 can be applied for by invitation only to support exceptional projects.

Deadlines and Contacts

Upcoming preliminary deadlines for the International Engagement Awards are:

19 August 2013

You can contact us at:
International Engagement Awards
Wellcome Trust
Gibbs Building
215 Euston Road
London NW1 2BE, UK

T +44 (0)20 7611 8806
E
internationalengagement@wellcome.ac.uk

Wednesday, 7 November 2012

Some pics

I have uploaded some pictures of the travels I managed to do last month. Forgive me if I don’t upload them again but it took me a whole day to get them up once, plus, we pay per Mb over here, and since they don’t speak Spanish anyway, you can go to the other blog to see them. I hope you like them!

Wednesday, 24 October 2012

Vote for us

Two of our MSc students have entered the Dell Education Challenge. Help them get to the semifinal voting for them on the challenge website. Help empower these two promissing scientists make their idea of promoting science among children a reality.

note: I think you have to register to vote for them. Please, take a few minutes to do it and help us out.

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Wednesday, 17 October 2012

We look for partner institutions in the US

In case someone new to this blog arrives to this post, let me introduce ourselves. The Kampala International University is a non-for-profit private tertiary institution with base in Uganda. It has campuses in Kampala (capital of Uganda), Ishaka (Western Uganda) and Dar-es-Salam (largest city in Tanzania). The person typing the keys is the director of the Institute of Biomedical Research that KIU recently created at the School of Health Sciences in Ishaka.

Our efforts are focussed in providing facilities, training and support to local researchers so they can develop their research agendas aimed to alleviate Africa’s disease burden. In these efforts, we are open to collaborations with any institution that values the social impact that science and scientists can have. their role in the development of low and middle income countries. Below you can find information about a call that could help us pursue our goals together with yours.

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http://www07.grants.gov/search/search.do?&mode=VIEW&oppId=204133

Document Type: Grants Notice
Funding Opportunity Number: APS-ASHA-13-000001
Opportunity Category: Discretionary
Posted Date: Oct 15, 2012
Creation Date: Oct 15, 2012
Original Closing Date for Applications: Apr 15, 2013
Current Closing Date for Applications: Apr 15, 2013
Archive Date: May 15, 2013
Funding Instrument Type: Cooperative Agreement
Grant
Category of Funding Activity: Education, Health
Award Ceiling: $2,000,000
Award Floor: $0
CFDA Number(s):
98.006 -- Foreign Assistance to American Schools and Hospitals Abroad (ASHA)
Cost Sharing or Matching Requirement: No
Eligible Applicants
Public and State controlled institutions of higher education
Nonprofits having a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education
Private institutions of higher education
Additional Information on Eligibility:
Agency Name
Agency for International Development
Description
The United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Office of American Schools and Hospitals Abroad (ASHA), is accepting funding applications from U.S. Organizations that assist schools, libraries and medical centers outside the United States to serve as study and demonstration centers for American ideas and practices.

Tuesday, 18 September 2012

Friday, 29 June 2012

What we need to give a Molecular Biology Course in Uganda

Can someone help us out getting some of these?
Tris base
EDTA pH8.0
Sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS)
NaCl
KCl
Na2HPO4
KH2PO4
Acetic acid
Glycine
Bromophenol blue
Dithiothreitol
ß-mercaptoethanol
Phenol
Chloroform
Iso-amyl alcohol
Tryptone
Yeast extracts
NaOH
Ethanol
MgCl2
CaCl2
Na2 Acetate
Potassium acetate
hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB)
Protinese K enzyme
Ammonium acetate
Tips for micropipettes (white, yellow and blue colors)
Latex gloves
Eppendorf tubes
Black and white polaroid films
Taq Polymerase
dNTPS 100 mM
PCR buffers 10X
pGEM-T vector (a set with relevant cutting enzymes)
Agarose powder
Restriction Enzymes (HindIII, EcoRI, BamHI)
DNA ladders (100 base pair, 1KB)
Ethidium Bromide
Agarose gel loading buffers
THANKS IN ADVANCE JUST FOR TRYIING
Drop me an e-mail if you get anything amigosdeibruganda(arroba)gmail.com
More information about the course on this other blog
By the way, if anyone is interested in volunteer-teach at the event, do not hesitate to contact me.







































Monday, 7 May 2012

Priorities helping out the Institute of Biomedical Research

Let’s try to organize our efforts in this matter… Any initiative to help out setting up the Institute of Biomedical Research should be communicated via mail to amigosdeibruganda(at)gmail.com.

Even though it is one of the human inventions that more troubles brings to my phylosophical mind, what we need the most, and it is in addition the easiest thing to move around, is money. Donations will be done via one of the following mechanisms:

  • wire transfer to an account in Uganda or Spain. Details via mail.
  • on-line fundraising for particular projects that we will explain and advertise as they come. It will most probably be through the http://www.youcaring.com/ site since it is the only one that I have found that doesn’t charge transaction fees. I don’t know you but, to me, making money out of other people’s efforts and charity just doesn’t sound right…

In future posts I will develop some fundraising ideas that I already mentioned in the most popular post of the blog. The pen-recycling squad is already shaping up in Spain and we will soon explain how to join. These campaigns are usually country-specific, so feel free to start something similar wherever you are. All posts concerning donations and fundraising will have the “paticipation” tag so they are easier to find. Don’t forget to take a look to the initial post to see if tehre is anything you can do.

Now, about general use materials. I think we have paper and folders covered for a while with a couple of those efficient women that populate my life. We could use some pens, white board markers and eraser, post-it packs, memory sticks, external hard disks, and a screw-driver and a torch. All these things could be obtained here and sending them overseas would be more expensive than the value they have. Keep them only if I can take them with me somehow, or if they can be sent with a more valuable shipment.

The following will be  a list of priorities, the things in which we would spend the money if we had any. Tese are the same priorities for anything you might be able to find in a lab or warehouse. The golden rule is that you should only ship things that are valuable enough to make the costs of the delivery a worthy investment. DHL seems to be the chosen courier from UK. Not sure about the US but I imagine is the same. ask before sending anything because it is necessary to include a phone number as a contact. Any package should CLEARLY state that it contains donations for the Kampala International University. In the surprising case that you get quite a few things, we shall pool together everything coming from Europe to make one single (more affordable) shipment. The base camp will be Huesca. Castellón and Zaragoza will also be delivery points. Things coming from the States, at the moment, will be handled from San Diego. If this gets bigger, we will see what is more convenient. Do not hesitate to e-mail if you have ANY question (amigosdeibruganda(at)gmail.com. I am going to do a trip to Spain in a few weeks and also in December. I can bring things in my luggage then. I will (most probably) be in San Diego at the end of May, maybe in New York a few weeks later.

So, the list:

  • Improvements in the lab
    • Changing the locking system on the door to allow people getting in and out keeping the door closed. We just need to change the lockers for padlocks. We have asked for a budget and will let you know when we get it.
    • Covering the windows with mesh so the lab isn’t taken by termites in every storm and we keep outside other ordinary insects.

2012_04Apr-May_thumb

  • Internet connection for the lab through Orange3G costs us 299000 Ugandan Shillings ($120, 92€, 75 GBP). The DVC is negotiating with Orange-Uganda the connection for the whole campus but even if that arrives, it won’t be free.
  • We also need a first shipment of flies from the Blomington collection but I still don’t know the total cost.
  • Equipments:
    • micropipettes, urgent! We only have a partial set (thanks, you-know-who),
    • at least one table-top microcentrifuge, even better if we get two of them. Right now we have none and it’s kind of hard to do anything,
    • precision scale (the one we have is a beautiful piece of decoration ranging 1 to 10 grams, and we don’t even have the weights to make it work),
    • vortex,
    • spectrophotometer,
    • refrigerator,
    • and a long wishlist:
      • at least one complete electrophoresis tank (the smaller the better) and two or three gel trays. Right now we have one tank with lid and another one without (e.g. useless) and one single gel tray with two combs,
      • -20ºC freezer,
      • incubators to keep the flies at constant temperature,
      • speedvacuum
      • SDS-PAGE set
      • motorized homogenizer
      • microscopes to work with flie
  • Various Lab Materials:
    • autoclavable bottles, 100, 250 and 500 ml
    • beakers, flasks, calibrated tubes of various volumes
    • Polaroid film for Fotodyne gele-capture system
    • Inoculation loops and Digralsky spreaders
    • calibrated glass pipettes
    • brushes to clean calibrated tubes
    • glass tubes for bacterial growth 
    • racks for 1.5ml tubes 
    • tip boxes 
    • bunsen burners 
  • Consumables:
    • 1.5ml tubes
    • tips (10, 200 y 1000 microlitres)
    • 50ml falcon tubes (of 15ml we are served at the moment)
    • petri plates
    • bottles to grow flies
    • whatman and absorbent paper
  • Reagents and products:
    • agarose ($$$) and agar
    • ethidium bromide
    • ingredients for fly food, LB, PBS, TBE and other popular lab solutions
    • phenol, chlorophorm, sodium acetate, ethanol, isopropanol, TRI-reagent…
    • fenol, cloroformo, acetato sódico, etanol, propanol, TRI-reagent…
    • restriction enzimes, ligase, polymerase… See if one of those lab representatives can send us some samples Sonrisa 
  • Various:
    • water dispenser
    • printer (there might be one available for donation, but I add it just in case)
    • computers with a decent RAM (we have enough of the slow frustration-indecur ones)
    • a copy (digital or analogic) of
      • The Genome of Drosophila melanogaster, Dan L. Lindsley y Georgianna G. Zimm
      • The Development of Drosophila melanogaster, M. Bates y A. Martínez-Arias
      • Fly Pushing: The Theory and Practice of Drosophila Genetics, Ralph J. Greenspan
      • Current Protocols in Molecular Biology
      • and other useful lab manuals (ask me before you do any work in case we have them already)

and I am sure I am leaving something out… THANK YOU!!! CaracolCaracolCaracol

PS: You can now check out the Institute on the website of KIU-Western Campus.

Habemus website!!!!!

We finally are a tab on the website of the Western Campus of the Kampala International University. Yujuuuuuuu!!!!!

image

 

Vision

The Institute of Biomedical Research wants to develop and maintain a leadership role in the region's biomedical research scene.

Mission Statement

The IBR is a platform for the empowerment of women and men of diverse background who want to excel as socially responsible scientists and is dedicated to the promotion, development and delivery of excellence in biomedical research within all aspects of healthcare.

The IBR aims to provide leadership that inspires local professors and students to develop their research programs in a collaborative environment. The primary intellectual and research concerns of the Institute are the areas of Neurobiology, Genetics and Molecular Biology, and Epidemiology and Clinical Studies.

Core Values

     

  • The IBR management will work under strict rules of transparency to gain the respect and trust of renowned international funding entities.
  • The IBR will offer the leadership, support and opportunities for development that researchers need to fulfill their potential.
  • All faculty, students and staff working at the IBR will act with honesty and integrity in all the IBR operations.
  • All faculty, students and staff working at the IBR will respect and value the diversity of backgrounds, experiences, approaches and ideas of all individuals.
  • All faculty, students and staff working at the IBR will respectfully accept new ideas and will be open to learning from others and embrace collaborative working.

Goals of the IBR

     

  • Be a world class institution that provides high-quality facilities and education programs to impact the knowledge of women and men of all races.

  • Advance the frontiers of learning and break new grounds, using research as a tool for teaching, and for the creation and dissemination of knowledge of the highest quality.

  • Empower local researchers in the establishment of their own research groups that address the scientific questions that are more urgent for Africa and its people.

  • Create a platform where highly qualified professionals find the facilities and support they need to develop their career in a socially responsible manner, driving their research project by the needs of the region and impacting the quality of life of those surrounding them.

  • Establish a transparent management system that attracts funds from international cooperation agencies and scientific societies.

  • Enhance capacity building through education and training, in order to meet the needs and challenges of the 21st century in Africa.

  • Establish and fasten the promotion of African tradition, culture and scientific knowledge.

Friday, 27 April 2012

For those willing to help

I’m preparing a list of priorities and establishing the contacts to manage the sending and delivery of donations, both things and money. Be patient; we will soon be organized and we will put this thing to fly. Thank you all so much for your interest, your energy: you are the blood that gives oxigen to my cells.

Thursday, 19 April 2012

Thank you!!!!!

Ok, not even two days since I uploaded the "Ideas" post and this is already too big. I need more hands!! First of all, thank you all for your responses! We'll see what we get in the end but, hey, no-one can say you aren't enthusisastic! And now, a bit of organization. True that I didn't give an address, basically because if you start sending things we are going to make the postal service rich, but we are going to waste too many resources on the way.

Look for things that
  • a) I can take with me some time (in general all we need is a connection to Spain; I will pick them up from there but, even if there is no obvious connection, we can find it: I travel a lot and, if I am not going where you are, we'll try to find someone who can connect us).
  • b) are valuable and difficult to get here, even if they are big. We will look for a safe and affordable way to get them here.
And, apart from that, I realized I need volunteers to handle the resources locally, something like a regional coordinator, someone who is the person to go to in a city/ state/ country. That person should filter things a bit at first and then arrange for the delivery with me. Any volunteers? I also need someone in Spain that helps me centralizing everything. With the unemployment rate that we have that shouldn't be a problem, right?
THANKS!!

Do you want to help me out setting up a lab in Africa?

How can you join me in my efforts to set up the Institute of Biomedical Research (IBR) in the medical campus of the Kampala International University (KIU) in Ishaka-Bushenyi, Uganda? (KIU is a non-for-profit private institution)
  • When you go to the bank, to a restaurant, to IKEA… if there are publicity pens, pencils, notebooks, pen drives… take one for us. Give them to me next time we meet and I'll bring them.
  • When you accumulate points shopping with your credit card, filling up the tank, or being loyal to one of those companies that exchange fidelity for things more or less useful, check the catalog looking for something that we can use here, a screw driver, a desk organizer… Same as before. All these things are not worth the money of the delivery. If we meet, I'll bring them with me; otherwise, money will be the easiest to move around the world and we can buy these things here.
  • When you are running out of tape, eraser, ink in your white-board pen, paper… and you are going to buy more, buy one for us or, better, put the money aside and send it to us when you put some together.
  • Do you remember all those half-used notebooks that are accumulating dust somewhere in your room? Take the sheets that are useful to you and send us the rest.I'm going to leave this one out for the moment because we don't have an easy and cheap way to bring them here, but keep it in mind.
  • I know that the world is in crisis, but if you want to get involved a bit more, you can fund the master’s thesis of one of our MSc students. They already have a salary because, while they study, most of them are lecturers in the School of Health Sciences. What we need is the money to buy the reagents and materials for their research projects.
  • You can also fund for a period of time one of the expenses in our lab, like the internet connection (this is urgent, unlimited access with a router that can handle four or five computers costs 90€ – $120 – per month), the paper for the printer (we are trying to be paper free printing only what is absolutely required, but most of the things are not digitalized around here and we need real paper to talk to other departments and make things happen), the food for the flies, or one of the works we need to get done in the lab ( a door that has a padlock, the mosquito meshes that will stop the mess that the termites create in every storm, or fixing a dark room for the fluorescence microscope that was donated by the University of Cambridge in 2011).
  • Do you drink a lot of soda? Find out if your favourite brand offers the possibility of getting donations in exchange for collecting bottles, cans, plastic or metallic bottle tops. The same with any other product that you usually buy and has a certain environmental impact. Remember that you can “sell it” as a contribution to the environment in addition to the development of a developing country. If the company that sells the product doesn’t respond positively, try with an NGO that works for the environment.
  • Start your own team of waste revalorisation. In some cities it is possible to get a small economic incentive for some of the products that we trash or recycle (paper, metal, glass bottles, old cell phones and other electronics, ink cartridges, plastic bags…). In some cases it is as easy as taking them to the store by the corner. What one single person can get is usually not worthy (that’s what the big companies that make money out of our rubbish are using to make business) but if you put a team together you can collect some products in all your blocks, maybe some schools and shops in the neighbourhood will help you out. Talk to associations of neighbours, parents or students. No matter how little the amount you collect, for us it will be like rain after a draught.
  • If you are engineer or engineering student, you can come for a visit – you can use the excuse to go on a safari! - and design for us the solar power structure to provide with 24/7 electricity our lab. We also invite you to study the possibility to get energy out of the incredible amount of water that falls on our roofs almost every day, not only on our building but on the other blocks on campus, the hospital, and all the apartment blocks in which KIU hosts its employees.
  • And the cheapest thing of all, help us extend the rumour, reaching someone that can help us. This is not an NGO, not for the moment at least, for the good and the bad. We don’t have the back up of x number of years making good, but we also don’t have a bureaucratic load or intermediaries that can exhaust the funds before they get to their destination. This is me, Marta, whom you know or of whom you have heard about probably through someone who knows me - otherwise you wouldn’t be reading this – and I will put every penny in the lab, I will show you pictures, and the bills and the account books, and I will host you in my home if you want to come and see it, and I will make room for you if you want to come and do something with your own hands, and I will thank you for every crumb of help with every cell of my body.
And if you work in a lab you can do much more:
  • When you find an abandoned micropippete in a drawer, poor thing no-one is ever going to use it again because it is not trustable, keep it for us.
  • When you change the electrophoresis system and the old gel trays don’t fit in the new tanks, keep them for us!
  • Get books for us! Any lab manual, protocols book, manuals of genetics and Drosophila, textbooks of any subject that has anything to do with Biology and the Biomedical Sciences (and if you are teaching and you ask the publishers they will give them to you for free). If the copy that you have in the lab is old, ask your boss to get a new one and send us the old one.
  • Ask about the warehouse of your university or institute, where all the things that no-one wants to use because they are old or obsolete go. Look for electrophoresis tanks, spectrophotometers, dissection microscopes to work with flies or C.elegans, scales, incubators, refrigerators, thermo-blocks, water baths, computers… Find out how to get a donation from your institution and if they could cover the delivery if it’s something big that I cannot carry in my luggage. If they don’t cover it, campaign a bit to raise the funds.
  • Every time a commercial representative asks for your time to tell you about the virtues of a product, ask them to donate some samples for us in exchange. Any plastic consumable would be welcome (1.5ml tubes, conical tubes – 15 and 50ml), small tools (pestles, forceps, scalpels…), extraction kits, small samples of reagents, anything!!!
  • If you find any funding source from your country to collaborate with developing countries in the fields of research and higher education, think of a project in which we can work together. We will do anything you need us to do: institutional back up, use of facilities, publicity, logistics of the event… I will, if you want to come and do something on the ground, host you in my house.
Basically, anything that you can think of that can help us start (and keep going) the engine of this laboratory will be received with applauds. Receive in advance the gratitude of the Director of the Institute for devoting ourselves the time to read all this. I will do my best to bring here everything you get for us at the minimal expense for you.

Thursday, 12 April 2012

My apologies and explanations

Dear all:

I got back to Ishaka, Uganda, almost two weeks ago and I am already getting used to my new life and work at the Kampala International University -KIU. As I expected, I don’t see the way to keep blogging about my travels, my life in Africa and the anecdotes and adventures that come along with them in both Spanish and English. I have taken the decision to stick with my mother tongue in this. My apologies if it makes you feel that I abandon you. El caracol viajero will be from now on the only place where those things appear. I intend to blog about my experiences as scientist and that I will do it in English, not sure if here or somewhere else. I also want to get my other blogs reactivated and I hope you understand that I can’t keep writing things in duplicate.

I have adopted English as my language for work to the point that I am pretty useless when it comes to talk about science in Spanish. I understand that having a common language makes things much easier, much faster, and, now that I am kind of fluent, I see how English is a better choice than a Romanic language for that purpose. For story telling, though, it is no rival, especially for a Romanic-shaped brain like mine, late-learner and late-adopter of the Anglo ways. I do think in English in many moments throughout the day and there are concepts that I have learned in that language. There are, therefore, things that come to my mind in English and I intend to introduce a bit of that in El caracol. It’s just a bit of who I am, right? Someone who uses two languages to build one life.

Someone told me when I started this that I could write in English and people could use google translator. Well, google translator works as “well” the other way around and I am prioritizing my family here Sonrisa You’ll have to deal with the imperfections of the software, I’m afraid. Anyway, I hope you can take it as an excuse to learn a bit of Spanish and enjoy the shapes of the words, the pace of the paragraphs, the never-ending sentences… Who knows, you might even like it the same way I now like English when it was, together with Maths, the subject I hated the most in school. One never knows…

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The apartment on the upper-right is my house now. Don’t you just love the combination of blue, green and white of the landscape?

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Tuesday, 22 November 2011

An image

My mum told me today that she wanted me to upload a picture of me. Hehe, I believe she wasn’t thinking about this, but since I am back on land, dry, and with only a couple of bruises and a blister as memories, there you have one in which I am pretty much in the center Risa.

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I think this rapid is the one they call The Bad Place. It’s in the first half of the typical rafting on the Nile near Jinja, in an area where there used to be the Bujagali Falls, until last week, when they closed the dam and Bujagali became a reservoir.

Monday, 21 November 2011

Little angels

 

Writing about the Little angels project without being able to upload pictures doesn't seem right. If I had good connection, I would upload a video, tell you that those without school uniform are in need of a sponsor, and I would let you to it. Well, no, I would add a picture of the room that was mine for three days, and then I would let you enjoy the little dancers. The connection got a fright when I tried to upload the video, so I'll have to turn to plan B.

The project was started around half a year ago by Duncan, a guy in his early twenties who was so grateful for the opportunities that he got thanks to his foreign sponsor that decided to pay it forward setting up a school for needy children and orphans by the Lake Bunyonyi. And there it is the school, simple and small, but giving the kids the chance to go to school. The level is not outstanding, but it's a beginning: at least they have a place to go where people do care for them. Fundraising takes a big part of the time of all the people involved, even the kids, but that's how it is, if one has to dance with the musungus (white people) to touch their heart and their pockets, let us dance.

I was given the chance to spend three days with them while staying with a family, getting a taste the conditions that people usually enjoy around here: the shower, a washbowl; the toilet, a hole in the ground (both with their own space separated from the rest of the world by walls, more or less precarious, but walls); the light, the sun, candles or a torch; the alarm clock, the birds – the sun helps but the windows are so small that it barely gets in; the kitchen, a small annex; the backyard, the plantation of bananas and matoke; and in spite of the proximity of the water, every drop that is used has to be fetched from the lake – an engineer, please, go to the area and design a system to get the water up the hill more efficient than plastic containers.

I was there as a volunteer but, doing doing, I didn’t do much. Most of the time I played with the little ones of the family: origami birds, throwing stones and bottle caps when I finally got hold on them, messing around with the touch screen of my computer (while the battery lasts). At school, I taught half an hour of Maths and the rest of the time I let them love me, trying to multiply the number of little hands that each of my fingers could hold. We also did some flips, but when the sun struck and I saw that the line was getting longer and longer and fights were starting, I stopped; my kidneys couldn’t get any more kids to fly in the air.

The impressions about Jinja, the sunset cruise on Lake Victoria and the rafting of the Nile stay for a future post. For now, just saying that I’ve come back alive and I’ve enjoyed it like a little child.