42 research outputs found

    Global Ethics and Nanotechnology: A Comparison of the Nanoethics Environments of the EU and China

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    The following article offers a brief overview of current nanotechnology policy, regulation and ethics in Europe and The People’s Republic of China with the intent of noting (dis)similarities in approach, before focusing on the involvement of the public in science and technology policy (i.e. participatory Technology Assessment). The conclusions of this article are, that (a) in terms of nanosafety as expressed through policy and regulation, China PR and the EU have similar approaches towards, and concerns about, nanotoxicity—the official debate on benefits and risks is not markedly different in the two regions; (b) that there is a similar economic drive behind both regions’ approach to nanodevelopment, the difference being the degree of public concern admitted; and (c) participation in decision-making is fundamentally different in the two regions. Thus in China PR, the focus is on the responsibility of the scientist; in the EU, it is about government accountability to the public. The formulation of a Code of Conduct for scientists in both regions (China PR’s predicted for 2012) reveals both similarity and difference in approach to nanotechnology development. This may change, since individual responsibility alone cannot guide S&T development, and as public participation is increasingly seen globally as integral to governmental decision-making

    Trust in Nanotechnology? On Trust as Analytical Tool in Social Research on Emerging Technologies

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    Trust has become an important aspect of evaluating the relationship between lay public and technology implementation. Experiences have shown that a focus on trust provides a richer understanding of reasons for backlashes of technology in society than a mere focus of public understanding of risks and science communication. Therefore, trust is also widely used as a key concept for understanding and predicting trust or distrust in emerging technologies. But whereas trust broadens the scope for understanding established technologies with well-defined questions and controversies, it easily fails to do so with emerging technologies, where there are no shared questions, a lack of public familiarity with the technology in question, and a restricted understanding amongst social researchers as to where distrust is likely to arise and how and under which form the technology will actually be implemented. Rather contrary, ‘trust’ might sometimes even direct social research into fixed structures that makes it even more difficult for social research to provide socially robust knowledge. This article therefore suggests that if trust is to maintain its important role in evaluating emerging technologies, the approach has to be widened and initially focus not on people’s motivations for trust, but rather the object of trust it self, as to predicting how and where distrust might appear, how the object is established as an object of trust, and how it is established in relation with the public

    Barriers to the effective treatment and prevention of malaria in Africa: A systematic review of qualitative studies

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In Africa, an estimated 300-500 million cases of malaria occur each year resulting in approximately 1 million deaths. More than 90% of these are in children under 5 years of age. To identify commonly held beliefs about malaria that might present barriers to its successful treatment and prevention, we conducted a systematic review of qualitative studies examining beliefs and practices concerning malaria in sub-Saharan African countries.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We searched Medline and Scopus (1966-2009) and identified 39 studies that employed qualitative methods (focus groups and interviews) to examine the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of people living in African countries where malaria is endemic. Data were extracted relating to study characteristics, and themes pertaining to barriers to malaria treatment and prevention.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The majority of studies were conducted in rural areas, and focused mostly or entirely on children. Major barriers to prevention reported included a lack of understanding of the cause and transmission of malaria (29/39), the belief that malaria cannot be prevented (7/39), and the use of ineffective prevention measures (12/39). Thirty-seven of 39 articles identified barriers to malaria treatment, including concerns about the safety and efficacy of conventional medicines (15/39), logistical obstacles, and reliance on traditional remedies. Specific barriers to the treatment of childhood malaria identified included the belief that a child with convulsions could die if given an injection or taken to hospital (10/39).</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>These findings suggest that large-scale malaria prevention and treatment programs must account for the social and cultural contexts in which they are deployed. Further quantitative research should be undertaken to more precisely measure the impact of the themes uncovered by this exploratory analysis.</p

    Ethics and Nanotechnology: Views of Nanotechnology Researchers

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    Electron-Transfer Reactions in Micelles: Dynamics of Psoralen and Coumarin Radical Cations

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    Radical cations of several psoralens and coumarins have been generated by photoionization in aqueous micellar solution for a comparison of their dynamic behavior with results observed previously in aqueous solution. The photoionization efficiencies are significantly higher in anionic sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) micelles than in aqueous solution as a result of favorable electrostatic effects that lead to rapid ejection of the electron into the aqueous phase. By contrast, much lower quantum yields are measured in neutral and cationic micelles. Experiments with anionic quenchers that are soluble only in the aqueous phase demonstrate that exit of the radical cations from anionic SDS micelles is too slow to measure (<10\u2075 s\u207b\ub9) under our conditions. Exit rate constants from neutral Triton X-100 micelles are approximately an order of magnitude faster. Comparison of equilibrium constants for both triplet and radical cations of 4,5',8-trimethylpsoralen demonstrates that electrostatic effects lead to an order of magnitude enhancement of the affinity of the radical cation for the anionic vs neutral micelles, as compared to the triplet of the same substrate. The slow exit of the radical cation from the micelle facilitates the measurement of rate constants for reaction of the micelle-incorporated radical cations with both water soluble quenchers and species for which exchange between micelle and aqueous phases is rapid on the time scale of the radical cation lifetime. This work provides some of the first kinetic data for dynamics of exit of reactive radical cations from micelles and indicates that these species may provide useful probes for studying electron-transfer dynamics in micellar media.Peer reviewed: YesNRC publication: Ye

    Mind the gap revisited

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