Ubuntu
“I am what I am because of who we all are” - African Proverb
Team IISER Kolkata right from the start wanted to transcend its reach and understanding of the problem it is trying to tackle beyond the four walls of the lab. Only after you deeply realize what the evil is and connect on a personal scale with its sufferers, can you effectively work hard to resolve it.
Human Practices gave the team this very opportunity to venture out with our BacMan.
As a part of the Human Practices we conducted the following activities:
- Surveyed the localities of Dalaipur and 16 number settlement : Field Surveys
- Interviewed expert researchers working on this field and physicians seeing and treating patients with these symptoms : Expert Interactions
- Conduct social awareness and communication camps in local villages
Interacting with experts and conducting pilot rounds of surveys revealed the following shocking facts:
- Local people are unaware of the exact cause of their symptoms such as lesions, hairfall and still births, etc.
- People are still under the shadow of superstitions safely assuming that the victims are in possession of the evil hence such dreadful symptoms.
- People follow unsafe practices to obtain water for drinking and cooking food etc exposing them to higher concentrations of arsenic which can be mitigated.
- Economically and socially backward classes are more likely to suffer arsenicosis due to associated undernourished state of health.
Hence Team IISER Kolkata decided to organize awareness camps with the following motives:
- Inform people about arsenic contamination and its origin in ground water of West Bengal.
- Educate them about the connection of unsafe drinking water and symptoms of arsenic.
- Eradicate superstitious beliefs regarding development of symptoms and inculcate a scientific perspective to look at the issue.
- Communicate about our project “BacMan” and how it would shield the people from arsenicosis.
- Wonderstruck them with achievements of synthetic biology in simple vernacular dialect of Bengali through form of posters, demonstrations, etc.
The links to the other Human Practices pages are given below.