Gulf Today

Hamdan Bin Rashid Award funds 15 studies

- Mariecar Jara-puyod, Senior Reporter

DUBAI: Medical and scientific research studies in eight areas benefiting mankind have been given a further boost with the announceme­nt on Tuesday of the Sheikh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum Award for Medical Sciences (Award) Dhs2.5 million funding to 15 research projects in the UAE.

Award executive director Abdullah Bin Souqat expressed his gratitude to UAE Minister of Finance, Deputy Ruler of Dubai and Award Patron, Shiekh Hamdan Bin Rashid Al Maktoum for his continuous support to scientists.

The Award which has so far financiall­y-assisted 700 research works including the 15 for 2021, was establishe­d on April 10, 1999 through Supreme Decree No. 5 by the then UAE Vice President and Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai, the late Sheikh Ma ktou mb in rash id alma k to um, to honour scientists from around the world who promote and pursue medical/scientific works for the improvemen­t of the quality of life.

For this year, the chosen 15 scientific research projects passed through the normal evaluation pricedures which had been conducted by over 58 Uae-based and internatio­nal panel of reviewers, according to Souqat. The 15 were from the Sharjah University, UAE University, Mohammed Bin Rashid University of Medicine and Health Sciences, New York University (Abu Dhabi) and Dubai Health Authority split into seven clinical research and eight basic sciences. These are regarding rare diseases, cancer, mental/psychiatri­c disorders, diabetes, metabolic syndrome, viral as well as respirator­y diseases, and drugs developmen­t or discovery.

According to the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) more research should be accomplish­ed in rare diseases – which currently runs up to 8,000, a big number of which are said to have originated from genetics abnormalit­ies. Examples are Water Allergy wherein hives develop upon water, at any temperatur­e, touches the skin; Foreign Accent Syndrome, whereby the person speaks a seemingly foreign language his acquisitio­n of which is untraceabl­e; and the Alice in Wonderland Syndrome, a neuropsych­ological condition wherein the individual gets a distorted perception of size and distance.

As recent WHO global data on diabetes prevalence is at 422 million people mostly in poor and developing countries, the Internatio­nal Agency for Research on Cancer has noted that one in five people anywhere across the globe develop cancer at any point in their life with one in five men and one in eight women dying. Everyone is said to have cancer cells.

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