HUMAN PRACTICES
Timeline
Here we are going to describe each of the human practices made by our team, the impact that they had in our project. Each has description has an insight (what we thought before the activity), changes (impact that it had in our project), resume (brief summary of activity)
Initial contact with a professional research
Insights: Disinformation. We wanted to break paradigms and establish a concrete mentality about the disease we wanted to attack with our project, understanding the patient.
Changes: Disinformation. We wanted to break paradigms and establish a concrete mentality about the disease we wanted to attack with our project, understanding the patient.
Resume
The first activity of human practices we did as a team, was to request the support of a professional, this with the goal of commenting our ideas and asking him or her, to guide us in the process of being able to help people from all social sectors with our project. This is how the team visited psychologist Carmina Gudiño´s office, who provided us with reliable information about depression and anxiety disorders. She answered all the questions we had, as well as reviewed and approved all the material and information prepared for the human practices activities. She also gave us information about some established myths about depression and anxiety, and how these symptoms are sometimes normalized by society.
Because of this, we decided to give a lecture about basic information, and the most common symptoms of depression and anxiety in an Institution named Galilea 2000 A.C.
Galilea 2000 A.C
Insights: Lack of comprehension. We should see the disease from the true eyes of a person with the disease.
Changes: We develop a truthful motivation for helping people.
Resume
This association, gives shelter and provide assistance to relatives of patients who are treated in a hospital near by the area of the institution. We considered this group as one with a higher possibility of suffering depression and anxiety, due to the environment they have to be, at the time their relatives suffer a specific type of illness.
Because of this, we gave a lecture. Our objective was to generate awareness that both, depression and anxiety are diseases that need to be treated as such, otherwise they can have severe consequences of different type including suicide.
On the lecture we gave basic information of the disease, as well as information of public and private institutions able to provide help and support.
At the beginning of the lecture we asked the persons to fill some questions, the questions were written on a cardboard and we gave them stickers, so the registry was their answer (since the questions were true or false).
Throughout the talk the great majority of the assistants showed interest on the topic and on the information given, since they are in a vulnerable state we believe that it might be easier for them to understand the relevance of mental illnesses.
At the end, we asked the people to answer the same questions as the beginning, to measure the impact of our presentation.
We considered this activity a potential success since the information was of great importance for those who are in need of help. W.H.O. has also recognized that the stigmatization of depression and lack of availability for treatment is still prevalent. In Mexico, mental illnesses continues to be a taboo, with the increasing depression events in the population, this sort of talks are necessary. Our plan is to keep pushing towards an open dialogue for depression.
More about Galilea 2000 A.C:
This institution gives integral and humanitarian help to patients of a hospital named Hospital Civil de Guadalajara and their relatives. Help provided includes emotional, medical or nutritional, throughout programs intended to motivate people to improve their way of living.
This non-profit organization received donations from the private sector, or people interested in maintaining the program active.
The organization has a partnership with Fray Antonio Alcalde shelter, which main characteristic is to help people from outside the state, who attend medical appointments at the hospital, or who have a relative in the hospital.
Kurago Biotek
Insights: Not responsible. We thought that our product could be made working alone with E. coli, without considering the adverse effects that this could cause in people.
Changes: it was considered to test the strategy first in E. coli and later pass it to L. rhamnosus, a microorganism better accepted by humans.
Resume
Our team went to the company Kurago Biotek, experts in cultures of beneficial and active living microorganisms along with nutrients, to talk with them and receive feedback on the initial strategy that we thought to carry out, which was to use E. coli bacteria for realization of our psychobiotic. The company advised us to use a well-known probiotic, such as L. rhamnosus, since its benefits have been well studied and its good acceptance by the human body is known. On the other hand, they advised us to use E. coli only to test our work before passing it on to L. rhamnosus, since it would be easier to test its functioning first in E. coli.
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Panel with experts, students and parents
Insights: Target. The panel helped us identify new groups of people vulnerable to these diseases, we adapted our product and market studies according to the new information recollected.
Changes: The community presented more interest not only on the topic, but in our project.
Resume
The team decided to invite three expert psychologists in education, systemic family therapy and student affairs to a panel that aimed to talk about depression from an integral angle to the students, teachers and parents of our university. The event was held in the congress center of our university and was planned based on the idea of a coffee talk. At the beginning of the event the project of our team was presented and a brief introduction of the event was given to put in context those present. Subsequently, the experts talked about definitions, myths, truths and situations in particular of depression and anxiety. Finally, there was a time for attendees to express their doubts or share their experiences.
From this event, we realized that depression not only affects people with low economic resources, who have had some loss or suffer from another serious illness, but that all those exposed to stress become vulnerable to develop a disorder depressed or anxious, like students. This helped us along with our market studies to define the audience to which our product would be directed.
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Science Diffusion in elementary schools
Insights: Appeal. We thought that they wouldn’t be interested on the topics
Changes: We learned that science is more present in our community than what we thought
Resume
Our team made a presentation with basic concepts from biology, microbiology, biotechnology, sustainable development, industry, applications of biotechnology, its origins and examples in our daily basis.
We contacted a secondary school called: “Escuela Secundaria José Arreola”, this public school is about a 10 min journey in car from our university; the administratives of the school allowed us to give the informative school to third and second grades alumni. The school has two schedules, it has different groups in the morning and in the afternoon, we attended both turns. After the chat was finished we proceeded organize a jeopardy for the teenagers to play, we divided the alumni into four groups, we gave each group a chance to pick a category: biotechnology, microbiology & biology, daily life and sustainable development. At the very end, we awarded the teams with candies equivalent to the points they had earned.
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Collaboration with Dr. Rebecca L. Carrier
Insights: Response. Gut-on-a-chip will provide a secure way to know Lactobachill has the desired effect.
Resume
Our university will work in collaboration with the Northeastern University through Dr. Rebecca Carrier, a professor of chemical engineering, who will collaborate with our team to specifically assist in the introduction of our Lactobachill product in a gut-on-a-chip system with the intention of characterize how the product interacts with said system and especially how it modulates the immune response in a competent immune model.
Meet up
Insights: Constructive criticism. Exchange experience with other teams.
Changes: We had to rethink our strategy of communication of the project and study more about the topic
Resume Our team attended the event organized by our university but on another campus, to present our project to teachers who gave us feedback. This gave us the opportunity to know the projects of other Latin American teams and at the same time to know our areas of opportunity for improvement based on the criticism and observations of the judges. The judges made us reconsider the side effects of our product and how we could do to prevent them from being negative.
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Market studies
Insights: Shocking. The public will be excited of something so innovator as a psychobiotic.
Changes: We choose an appropriate name and type of product
After a lot of research, we found out depression is a disease that affects most people between 15 and 29 years old, but we decided to shorten this range to 18-25, as we considered the necessities of a 15 year old person, are very different to the ones of one 29 years old one.
After several surveys, it was found that:
o A great portion of the target market, are not familiar with some important benefits of probiotics.
o 98% believe depression is a treatable mental disease.
o People need to be educated regarding depression, and its relationship with intestinal well-being.
o 73 out of 86 surveyed people are interested on buying products containing probiotics.