Ethical and rigorous human microbiome science requires radical interdisciplinary co-laboration - presented by Assoc. Prof. Wim van Daele

Ethical and rigorous human microbiome science requires radical interdisciplinary co-laboration

Assoc. Prof. Wim van Daele

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Ethical and rigorous human microbiome science requires radical interdisciplinary co-laboration
WD
Wim van Daele
University of Agder

Current human microbiome science is still marked by a European and North American bias with many important ethical implications on the horizon. In addition, the limited research on other understudied populations is not without its ethical quandaries either. In this presentation, I discuss and clarify these ethical issues by disentangling these into 3 main subsets: European and North American bias, cultural insensitivity, and lack of meaningful collaboration and inclusion. Thereafter, I propose an overall approach to solving these quandaries by introducing the notion of radical interdisciplinary co-laboration, in which different academic and non-academic stakeholders mediate their knowledges and labor together in studying human microbiomes. I will elicit how the proposed approach will render microbiome science more ethical and at the same time render the very science of microbiomes more precise and rigorous.

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MVIF.29 Ethical dimensions of microbiome research
Microbiome Virtual International Forum
Cite as
W. van Daele (2024, May 21, MVIF.29 Ethical dimensions of microbiome research), Ethical and rigorous human microbiome science requires radical interdisciplinary co-laboration
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Video length 17:12