Scientists don’t get to cure diseases, but they get to advise doctors and pharmaceutical companies on what treatments to test, which will then cure patients. This is a really complicated and long process, because we have to make sure there are no side effects and that the treatment really works – so it’s several years before our research becomes a cure, and I think all of us are too young to already have cured a disease!
But I have worked on projects on brain cancer, on stroke, on cervical cancer and on herpes virus infections – all of which I hope will be cures in the future!
I’ve also participated in clinical trials as a volunteer and had my brain scanned to test a new MRI technology that could be a cure too.
Hiya – I’ve not really cured any disease – my research is more increasing our basic understanding of how cancer forms with the hope someone else can take what I learn and use it to find cures.
that said I was part of a project that really reduced the ammount of cancer a mouse gets in its intestine by taking away a gene called MBD2. We’re now talking to chemists and people who design drugs to see if they can figure out a way of stoping this gene with a drug.
thank you for answering my question, at first when i was younger i wanted to be a doctor, however i realised i was crap at science. So instead i have decided to become an accountant, as my math skills are wayyy better than my science skills.
I find it interesting of how you guys are studying these projects, such as cancer and viruses.
My one bit of advice is to do something you enjoy – what ever career you choose you could be doing it for a long time (like the rest of your life) so you need to be able to enjoy it. Usually if you enjoy something you’re good and it and vice versa – so that helps – Good luck
Hi 321blastoff, if you’re good at maths, then studying maths or physics at uni will be a doddle for you – and then you can still do science if you want to, but stick to doing all the maths the scientists are scared of. I work in Systems Biology, with lots of mathematicians that set up computer simulations of how biochemistry works in cells – and they need good people! So do look into that too if it sounds interesting!
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321blastoff commented on :
thank you for answering my question, at first when i was younger i wanted to be a doctor, however i realised i was crap at science. So instead i have decided to become an accountant, as my math skills are wayyy better than my science skills.
I find it interesting of how you guys are studying these projects, such as cancer and viruses.
Karen commented on :
My one bit of advice is to do something you enjoy – what ever career you choose you could be doing it for a long time (like the rest of your life) so you need to be able to enjoy it. Usually if you enjoy something you’re good and it and vice versa – so that helps – Good luck
Sarah commented on :
Hi 321blastoff, if you’re good at maths, then studying maths or physics at uni will be a doddle for you – and then you can still do science if you want to, but stick to doing all the maths the scientists are scared of. I work in Systems Biology, with lots of mathematicians that set up computer simulations of how biochemistry works in cells – and they need good people! So do look into that too if it sounds interesting!