Difference between revisions of "Team:UCL/HumanPractice"
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
<p> The main aim of our effort in human practices is to reduce the stigma around mental health problems by pointing out the fact that some of these, like depression or anxiety are actual diseases with physical causes and not a sign of weakness. Our lab work focuses on the connection between the gut microbiota and the brain to tackle mental diseases. Thus, we are directly tackling this misconception.</p> | <p> The main aim of our effort in human practices is to reduce the stigma around mental health problems by pointing out the fact that some of these, like depression or anxiety are actual diseases with physical causes and not a sign of weakness. Our lab work focuses on the connection between the gut microbiota and the brain to tackle mental diseases. Thus, we are directly tackling this misconception.</p> | ||
<div> | <div> | ||
− | <h3> What | + | <h3 style="margin-top:1%"> What our plan is</h3> |
<p>We are talking with people who work in mental health charities, people suffering from depression, practitioners and scientists to find out more about the problems of people suffering from depression. We also want to use the opportunity to create awareness of the mind-gut connection which is quite a young field of research. This helps us to make our project relevant for actual patients.</p> | <p>We are talking with people who work in mental health charities, people suffering from depression, practitioners and scientists to find out more about the problems of people suffering from depression. We also want to use the opportunity to create awareness of the mind-gut connection which is quite a young field of research. This helps us to make our project relevant for actual patients.</p> | ||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
Secondly, we realized that patients taking medication ,e.g. for depression, have to increase their dose in regular intervals. This is an issue we need to consider when building a genetic circuit that responds to triggers of mental illness in the gut.</p><div> | Secondly, we realized that patients taking medication ,e.g. for depression, have to increase their dose in regular intervals. This is an issue we need to consider when building a genetic circuit that responds to triggers of mental illness in the gut.</p><div> | ||
<div> | <div> | ||
− | <h3> Who we are working with </h3> | + | <h3> Who we are working with</h3> |
<ul> | <ul> | ||
Revision as of 11:31, 27 July 2015