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Immersing himself in Cushings
harem
Out of earshot, the women who worked for Harvey W. Cushing, M.D., referred
to themselves as the harem. The chief, said Cushing
biographer Michael Bliss, Ph.D., would not have been amused.
In a talk in the Historical Library of the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library
in February, Bliss, a historian at the University of Toronto and biographer
of William Osler, said Cushing enjoyed a decidedly professional relationship
with his female staff and was less than tender as a boss. He paid the
women who worked as secretaries, histologist and photographer low wages
and worked them long and irregular hours. He dictated up to 10,000 words
a day, expected a high level of performance and seldom thanked anyone.
Yet he also offered perks such as coveted football tickets, invitations
to his home and even trips to Europe.
The most devoted of his assistants was Madeline Stanton, who followed
him from Harvard to Yale, where she became director of the Historical
Library. In one of her journal entries, Stanton wrote, I shall be
miserable, I am sure, if I ever have to work with anyone else. Blisss
biography of Cushing is due out in 2006.

In genomics, the end of the beginning?
At the very least, the Human Genome Project was a technical and scientific
challenge; its no simple matter to sequence 3 billion pairs of DNA,
as the projects public consortium set out to do in 1990. But the
solution to the puzzle was in many ways not a technical one, Robert
L. Nussbaum, M.D., said in a visit to the medical school in January.
It became very clear early on that this project was never going
to work unless everyone did just a few things over and over again, really,
really well, said Nussbaum, chief of the genetic disease research
branch at the National Human Genome Research Institute. It was the
introduction of management and organizational techniques from outside
of science that probably made the biggest difference. Nussbaum said
a debate is now brewing within the institute on whether to declare the
project over next April, an even 50 years after Watson and Cricks
description of the double-helix structure of DNA, by which time it is
believed the final sequence will be assembled. Should we declare
it complete in 2003 and pack up and go home? Some say yes, he said.
The others take the more Churchillian view that this is neither
the end, nor the beginning of the end, but rather the end of the beginningthat
we have now launched a whole new field called genomic science, and lets
get started.

Nurse warns against repeating Tuskegee abuses
The last living health care provider involved in the infamous Tuskegee
experiment, which followed African-American men with syphilis for 40 years
while withholding treatment from a fraction of the cohort, warns that
the American public needs to remain alert to comparable abuses that still
exist. Im concerned that this is still going on, said
Mary Starke Harper, R.N., Ph.D., a student nurse during the research
at the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. She spoke of her experiences on
February 18 as part of the Black History Month commemoration at the School
of Nursing. Harper, 82, known nationally and internationally as a patient-care
advocate and research consultant in geriatric psychiatry, said that neither
she nor the two registered nurses with whom she worked at the time knew
which patients were in the experimental control group. The study became
a symbol of racism in medicine, ethical misconduct in human research and
government abuse of the vulnerable, and led to the National Research Act
of 1974.

The worlds biggest country, and biggest
market
If you wanted to find one place with some of the thorniest
issues confronting biotechnology, youd need look no further than
China. With more than a fifth of the worlds people living inside
its borders, China has an enormous market for food and drugs, as well
as an emerging biotech industry and venture capitalists. And it faces
serious problems as it applies biotechnology to agriculture and pharmaceuticals.
The countrys pharmaceutical industry lacks original discoveries
in its portfolio and, said Zhangliang Chen, Ph.D., director of
Chinas National Laboratory of Protein Engineering and Plant Genetic
Engineering, You have 20 companies producing the same drug.
In a talk in December sponsored by the Peking-Yale Joint Center for Plant
Molecular Genetics and Agro-biotechnology, Chen said China is also producing
genetically modified foodswhich he believes to be the most efficient
way to produce food in poor countries, despite controversy over their
safety. If we use organic agriculture in China, he said, many
people are going to die because of starvation.
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