In crisis-hit Argentina, cancer
researcher turns to game show for funds
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[May 15, 2019]
By Miguel Lo Bianco and Cassandra Garrison
BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Amid a swirling
economic crisis and protests over budget cuts for research in Argentina,
one scientist has found a novel way to fundraise: winning money on a
television game show.
Marina Simian, a biologist for Argentina's National Scientific and
Technical Research Council, went on the local version of the TV program
"Who Wants to be a Millionaire," saying she needed the money to support
her cancer research.
Simian, the head of a nanobiology lab researching oncology treatments
for breast cancer and other forms of the disease, used her intellect on
the game show to win 500,000 pesos ($11,000) to pay for laboratory
supplies.
"I am not a hero. I used a strategy that was a bit creative or different
to get financing for my work group," Simian said in an interview at the
National University of San Martín in Buenos Aires.
Government funding has become less reliable for science research in
recession-hit Argentina amid rampant inflation and a tumbling peso. The
weaker exchange rate has also sapped people's spending power, especially
buying equipment overseas in dollars, a common practice due to better
availability and lower prices.
Jorge Aguado, a senior government science and technology official, told
Reuters that research budgets have increased since President Mauricio
Macri took office in 2015, but acknowledged the economic volatility has
caused delays in doling out the funds.
He added that fewer Argentine scientists were returning to the country
after doing research abroad, with just 41 last year down from 90 in 2013
- a potential brain drain.
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Marina Simian, a medical researcher, poses for a picture in Buenos
Aires, Argentina May 9, 2019. REUTERS/Agustin Marcarian
Argentina has three Nobel prize winners for science, but researchers
have long lamented a scarcity of resources for the field.
The funding hold-ups are why Simian threw her hat into the ring on
Tuesday night as the nation watched on live television.
She runs a lab where she and other researchers study resistance
against cancer medications. The project received funding in 2017,
but Simian said the money has been coming in at a trickle and last
year she only received half of what was due.
Simian, who addressed the current challenge during her appearance on
the show, said she hopes her TV debut will draw more attention to
the work being done by researchers.
"I cannot believe the impact this has had. I hope it will help us
talk about what is happening in science and technology. In the end,
that is what matters to us scientists," Simian told Reuters.
"We love what we do. We do it with great effort, but we need the
minimum conditions to work. If there are no changes in the economic
direction for science, I see it becoming very complex."
(Reporting by Miguel Lo Bianco and Cassandra Garrison; Writing by
Cassandra Garrison; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)
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