IBIMA Plataforma BIONAND and Farmaindustria promote knowledge of biomedical research among young people and the awakening of scientific vocations

  • The initiative ‘Bringing science to schools’ is holding a new session this Wednesday with young people from IES Litoral and the Official Vocational Training Centre (CESUR).

    The project aims to encourage the interest of secondary school and vocational training students in R&D, as well as to attract talent among the new generations.

     More than seventy students from the Official Vocational Training Centre (CESUR) of Malaga and the IES Litoral participated this Wednesday in a new edition of the training day. Bringing science to schools. Medicines research and development, organised by the Instituto de Investigación Biomédica de Málaga and Plataforma en Nanomedicina (IBIMA Plataforma BIONAND) and Farmaindustria.

    The aim of this activity is to provide secondary school and vocational training students with an overview of what biomedical research consists of and the impact of innovative drugs in the fight against diseases, all explained in an accessible and accessible way by experts in the drug development process, such as researchers, the pharmaceutical industry and patients. In this way, this project aims to encourage students' interest and enthusiasm for research, as well as to attract talent among the new generations.

    Francisco J. Tinahones, scientific director of IBIMA Plataforma BIONAND; Amelia Martín Uranga, director of the Clinical and Translational Research Department of Farmaindustria; Emilio Alba, director of the Oncology Intercentre Clinical Management Unit of the Regional and Virgen de la Victoria Hospitals in Malaga, and Lorena M. Soria Reyes, psychologist of the Malaga Association of Women with Breast Cancer (ASAMMA), took part in the conference.

    ‘I am pleasantly surprised by the high attendance at this conference, which shows the growing interest of students in research at the end of their higher education studies,’ said Tinahones. ‘Our Institute has more than a thousand researchers, including many workers from higher education courses such as CESUR,’ he added.

    From Farmaindustria, Martín Uranga highlighted the ongoing need to disseminate the value of biomedical research in contemporary society. ‘The R&D of a new drug requires multidisciplinary teams (doctors, pharmacists, biologists, physicists, mathematicians, engineers...) to respond to the unmet medical needs of patients and in this conference students can see that the path of health research can be explored in many ways,’ he stressed.

    Martín Uranga also emphasised the importance of patients in the process of developing new treatments, stressing that research should not be conducted exclusively for them, but should be carried out ‘with their active participation’. In this sense, he shared the work that Farmaindustria has been carrying out in collaboration with patient organisations and entities for more than a decade. ‘The main objective of this collaboration is to facilitate the contribution of patients in drug research and development activities, recognising their fundamental role in the search for innovative and effective medical solutions,’ said the Farmaindustria spokeswoman.

    During the day, the students were able to visit the different laboratories of the IBIMA BIONAND Platform and see, first-hand, what the researchers' daily work is like.