Tag: NUS

  • Innovative Partnership Between ITE, NUS And NUH Is About To Change How Kidney Stones Are Being Removed

    Innovative Partnership Between ITE, NUS And NUH Is About To Change How Kidney Stones Are Being Removed

    A team of staff from ITE has successfully created a solution to simplify percutaneous-nephrolithotomy (PCNL), which is the complicated process of removing large or complex kidney stones. The Percutaneous-Access-to-Kidney-Assist Device (PAKAD) is made possible through ITE’s collaboration with the National University Hospital (NUH), the National University of Singapore (NUS) and Invivo Medical Pte Ltd.

    Innovation to Make Complex Procedure Simpler, Shorter and Safer

    PCNL is a complicated surgery technique that is usually carried out by senior surgeons. Traditionally, PCNL surgeons refer to x-ray imaging of the patient’s kidney to locate the stone(s), before inserting a long and hollow needle through the skin to reach the stone(s). An endoscope surgical instrument is then inserted through the aid of the needle passage to fragment and remove the stone(s). This is complex, as the surgeon has to use free-hand techniques to locate the stone(s) in a three-dimensional environment, while referring to a two-dimensional image. At times, several attempts may be required, which lengthens the patient’s exposure to x-ray radiation and recovery period.

    The PAKAD incorporates precision engineering mechanisms to systematically adjust, guide and stabilize the needle into alignment with the targeted stone(s). Through successful trials on animals at NUH, the PAKAD has proven that it can simplify and shorten the PCNL process, hence reducing x-ray exposure, risks of complications, and recovery periods. With the PAKAD, the junior surgeons can also perform the needle insertion PCNL procedure

    Multiple Parties Make Innovation Possible

    ITE’s team’s research efforts were strengthened through the domain expertise of NUH and NUS. Through Invivo Medical, the device will be commercialized and a licensing agreement was signed among ITE, NUH, NUS and Invivo Medical. The team received financial support for the Applied Research through the MOE Innovation Fund, the NRF Proof-of-Concept grant, and the MOE Translational R&D and Innovation Fund.

    Work on the PAKAD started in 2011. After the PAKAD was developed and a patent application was filed, the PAKAD was first showcased at a major event at TechInnovation 2013, as part of the Singapore start-up ecosystem. At the event, PAKAD was matched with an investor, who is now bringing the device to market through Invivo Medical. Over the next five years, the sales of the device is projected to hit S$25 million.

    The contributions by various parties have made it possible for the innovation to benefit patients. The research team will complete clinical trials before obtaining regulatory approvals. PAKAD is expected to reach the market by the end of 2018.

    “This is an excellent example of an industry-institution partnership to develop innovative and integrated solutions to improve productivity and processes. We are grateful to NUH, NUS and Invivo Medical, to enable ITE to create and patent the Percutaneous Access to Kidney Assist Device (PAKAD) for safe kidney surgery,” said Ms Low Khah Gek, CEO, ITE.

    “The new technology allows for better precision during surgery and enhances patient safety and outcome. It expands on NUH’s track record of partnerships for clinical innovation and development that help raise the standard of clinical care. We look forward to more of these collaborations to bring about greater tangible benefits for our patients,” Prof Kesavan Esuvaranathan, Head and Senior Consultant, Department of Urology, National University Hospital.

    “NUS is delighted to have been part of this multi-party collaboration. Researchers from the NUS Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine provided medical expertise, which ITE used to enhance the PAKAD. Realising the strong potential for this technology to improve clinical procedures and healthcare for kidney stone patients, the NUS Industry Liaison Office took the lead in the commercialization process, including managing negotiations for this multi-party licensing agreement. Our endeavor to bring innovative technologies closer to market is made possible with great partners who have similar goals,” said Mr Sean Flanigan, Director of NUS Industry Liaison Office.

    “The new medical-device is the world’s first operational Percutaneous Access to Kidney Assist Device (PAKAD). It is the result of a successful collaboration by three institutions and the industry and made possible by a match-up at TechInnovation 2013. Beyond this, we plan to do continual product development to apply the invention to more minimally-invasive surgical and biopsy procedures,” said Dr Joseph Chai, Managing Director / Director, Invivo Medical Pte Ltd.

     

    Source: https://biotechin.asia

  • 10 Lulusan Pengajian Melayu NUS Terima Ijazah Kepujian – Jumlah Terbesar Sejak 2011

    10 Lulusan Pengajian Melayu NUS Terima Ijazah Kepujian – Jumlah Terbesar Sejak 2011

    Seramai 10 mahasiswa di Jabatan Pengajian Melayu Universiti Nasional Singapura (NUS) tahun ini lulus dengan ijazah kepujian. Salah seorang daripada mereka malah menerima ijazah kepujian kelas pertama.

    Jumlah tersebut adalah yang paling besar sejak program ijazah kepujian diperkenalkan bagi Pengajian Melayu di universiti itu sekitar enam tahun lalu.

    Ketua Jabatan Pengajian Melayu NUS, Profesor Madya Noor Aisha Abdul Rahman memberitahu BERITAMediacorp, sejak program ijazah kepujian pengajian itu dimulakan pada tahun 2011, jumlah mahasiswa yang mengikuti Pengajian Melayu sebagai jurusan utama tidak pernah berkurangan, dengan purata enam mahasiswa bagi setiap tahun akademik.

    “Dalam tempoh lima hingga enam tahun ini purata mahasiswa (yang lulus dengan ijazah kepujian) Pengajian Melayu kira-kira enam orang. Pada tahun 2014, kami mempunyai tiga mahasiswa saja, setelah itu jumlahnya sama ada lima atau enam. Dan yang baru tamat pengajian ini seramai 10 orang,” kata Dr Noor Aisha, sambil menambah jumlah itu tidak termasuk mahasiswa yang mengambil Pengajian Melayu sebagai subjek minor ataupun elektif.

    (Gambar: Ummu Rabbisyfina/ BERITAMediacorp)

    NUR ZAKIAH – LULUS IJAZAH KEPUJIAN KELAS PERTAMA

    Dr Noor Aisha turut memberitahu BERITAMediacorp, pihaknya juga sedang giat berusaha untuk menarik lebih ramai bakal mahasiswa supaya mengikuti Pengajian Melayu sebagai jurusan utama. Namun usaha untuk menarik minat mereka supaya mengikuti Pengajian Melayu bukan sesuatu yang mudah. Sebaliknya menurut Dr Noor Aishah, ia adalah satu “masalah yang sudah lama wujud”.

    “Sejak sekitar 20 tahun lalu, saya rasa tidak ramai yang mengikuti (Pengajian Melayu) sebagai jurusan utama. Sekarang, dengan lebih banyak jurusan yang ditawarkan (di universiti), bermakna terdapat lebih banyak modul, lebih banyak peluang bagi mahasiswa. Jadi ia memang mencabar bagi kami untuk mendapatkan jumlah besar mahasiswa yang mengikuti Pengajian Melayu,” ujar Dr Noor Aisha lagi.

    Contohnya, Nur Zakiah Abdul Hamid merupakan satu-satunya lulusan ijazah Sarjana Muda Kepujian Kelas Pertama jurusan Pengajian Melayu bagi tahun akademik 2016/2017. Beliau juga menjadi pemenang Hadiah Yayasan Warisan Melayu.

    (Gambar: Nur Zakiah Abdul Hamid)

    Hakikatnya, jurusan itu bukanlah pilihan pertama beliau. Namun setelah mengikuti modul mengenai Islam di Singapura yang ditawarkan oleh jabatan tersebut, beliau mula ‘jatuh cinta’.

    “Saya suka Pengajian Melayu kerana ia begitu menyeluruh. Ia mencakupi bidang politik, sosiologi, antropologi. Dulu semasa saya di Maktab Rendah, saya tak begitu berminat dengan isu-isu masyarakat Melayu, disebabkan tanggapan tertentu, yang negatif yang sudah terbentuk dalam minda,” Nur Zakiah, 23 tahun, memberitahu BERITAMediacorp.

    Ternyata, manfaat yang diperolehi dari pengajiannya selama empat tahun itu berhasil membangunkan keupayaan Nur Zakiah untuk berfikir secara kritikal dan beliau kini “lebih bangga dengan masyarakat Melayu” serta terdorong untuk membantu masyarakat sendiri.

    ORANG MELAYU TAK PERLU BELAJAR TENTANG MELAYU?

    Antara usaha yang dijalankan Jabatan Pengajian Melayu NUS untuk mendampingi para pelajar dan juga masyarakat bagi memperkenalkan kepada mereka tentang jabatan dan jurusan itu termasuklah mengadakan ceramah dan sesi pengenalan.

    Dalam pada itu, tujuan usaha tersebut adalah untuk menjelaskan dan melenyapkan salah tanggapan yang biasa dikaitkan dengan Pengajian Melayu.

    “Sering juga saya perlu menekankan bahawa tumpuan kami bukan untuk melatih mahasiswa menjadi guru kerana itu skop Institut Pendidikan Nasional (NIE). Kami juga tidak mengajar bahasa. Tenaga pengajar kami juga kecil jadi kami menumpukan perhatian kepada pengajaran bahasa menerusi kesusasteraan Melayu.

    “Tapi kurikulum kami begitu luas kerana ia termasuk politik, agama, sejarah, isu-isu pemodenan dan cabaran-cabaran perubahan,” kongsi Dr Noor Aisha kepada BERITAMediacorp.

    (Gambar: Nur Zakiah Abdul Hamid)

    Antara salah tanggapan yang mungkin menjadi faktor mengapa belum ramai yang mahu mendalami Pengajian Melayu, menurut Dr Noor Aisha, termasuk pandangan bahawa “mereka orang Melayu jadi mereka sudah tahu semua hal tentang orang Melayu”.

    “Saya juga perlu menjelaskan bahawa kami mengambil pendekatan sains sosial berbilang bidang dalam pengajian Melayu. Mereka tidak akan tahu konsep, teori dan perspektifnya jika tidak dilatih dengan betul. Mereka tidak akan dapat bercakap tentang masyarakat dan sesuatu subjek dengan cara yang sistematik.

    “Hanya setelah para mahasiswa mengikuti pengajian ini, mereka akan dapat melihat perbezaan antara yang mengikutinya dengan yang tidak mengikutinya,” kata Dr Noor Aisha.

    Bagi Nur Zakiah sendiri, meskipun topik utama pengajian itu adalah mengenai Melayu, beliau menegaskan “kita mesti memahami bahawa jurusan Pengajian Melayu juga berbilang bidang dan mengikut konteks Singapura”.

    “Pasti ada sesuatu yang boleh kita pelajari tentang masyarakat kita. Kita sekarang hidup dalam era global, jadi sentiasa akan ada isu-isu kontemporari yang masih tidak diketahui.

    “Bagi saya, saya mengambil jurusan ini kerana saya mahu berdepan soalan-soalan tentang identiti. Saya rasa itulah yang menarik tentang Pengajian Melayu,” Nur Zakiah memberitahu BERITAMediacorp.

    (Gambar: Nur Zakiah Abdul Hamid)

    PENGAJIAN MELAYU – BUKAN SETAKAT JADI GURU BAHASA MELAYU

    Dari segi prospek pekerjaan, Dr Noor Aisha berkata itu tidak menjadi masalah. Meskipun ramai yang menyangka siswazah Pengajian Melayu setakat menjadi guru bahasa Melayu, lulusan pengajian jabatan itu sudahpun membuktikan mereka mampu menebarkan sayap dalam bidang-bidang pekerjaan yang menjangkaui bidang pendidikan.

    Menurut Dr Noor Aisha, kebanyakan daripada kohort yang baru saja menerima ijazah kepujian mereka pada 10 Julai lalu sudahpun mendapat pekerjaan.

    “Lulusan kami selalunya tiada masalah untuk mendapatkan pekerjaan dalam tempoh yang singkat (selepas tamat pengajian). Misalnya kohort yang baru ini, saya tahu tujuh daripada mereka sudah mendapat kerja,” kata Dr Noor Aisha.

    Malah, beliau menambah, lulusan dari kohort-kohort yang lain juga tidak semua yang menjadi guru bahasa Melayu, dengan ramai bertugas sebagai karyawan dalam sektor privet dan kakitangan awam lainnya.

     

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • 3 Anak Melayu Raih Kelulusan Kepujian Kelas Pertama Dari NUS

    3 Anak Melayu Raih Kelulusan Kepujian Kelas Pertama Dari NUS

    Tiga anak Melayu/Islam muncul sebagai antara lulusan cemerlang dari NUS tahun ini degan lulusan dengan ijazah Kepujian kelas pertama.

    DISIPLIN, PENGURUSAN MASA FAKTOR KEJAYAAN

    Syasya Naqiyah Amir misalnya berada dalam senarai dekan buat tiga semester.

    Bagaimanapun, penerima Sarjana Muda Pentadbiran Perniagaan ini masih sempat meluangkan masa menjadi relawan di Jamiyah dan anggota tiga kelab di NUS.

    “Untuk saya, cabaran utama adalah persaingan sengit antara pelajar-pelajar. Tetapi saya suka sekitaran sebegitu kerana ia memotivasi saya untuk mencapai kecemerlangan untuk memperbaiki diri sendiri dan untuk bekerja keras,” katanya.

    Seperti Syasya, Khalid Othman yang meraih Sarjana Muda dalam jurusan Sains Hayat dimasukkan dalam senarai Dekan.

    Tanggapan bahawa matematik dan sains adalah subjek sukar mendorong beliau memilih kerjaya seorang guru. Khalid kini bertugas di sebuah sekolah menengah.

    Khalid memberitahu BERITAMediacorp: “Saya rasa yang lebih penting adalah bagaimana saya dapat tinggikan keyakinan diri saya di dalam universiti untuk berbual dan bercakap di dalam kelas, dalam khalayak orang ramai. Itulah yang saya rasa penting untuk menjadikan saya seorang guru.”

    INGIN JADI CONTOH KEPADA ADIK BERADIK

    Bagi Muhammad Khairul Anwar Jamil, beliau ingin menjadi contoh kepada lima adiknya.

    Mentelah lagi, beliau pernah gagal memasuki universiti setelah meraih keputusan peringkat “A “yang kurang memuaskan.

    “Pada ketika itu saya merasa sangat kecewa. Tetapi pada saat itu, keluarga dan rakan-rakan saya mendorong saya untuk meneruskan pelajaran. Bila saya masuk ke politeknik, saya mendapat tahu yang saya mula meminati bidang kejuruteraan,” ujarnya.

    Peluang kedua itu tidak disia-siakan dan Khairul bakal berangkat ke Ecuador bulan depan untuk bertugas di salah sebuah syarikat minyak terbesar di dunia.

     

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Madrasah Wak Tanjong Student Becomes 2-Time Valedictorian

    Madrasah Wak Tanjong Student Becomes 2-Time Valedictorian

    Valedictorian Nisha Mohd Rafiq, who will graduate with a PhD in Biological Sciences from NUS and King’s College London on 9 July, has been interested in science since she was young.

    At fourteen years of age, the avid reader established a Science Club in her secondary school — Madrasah Wak Tanjong — so that she could gather like-minded individuals for discussions about science. Generous with her time and knowledge, Nisha conducted extra lessons and practical sessions in the laboratory for her peers in Secondary Four. Upon completion of her O Levels, Nisha studied biomedical science at Temasek Polytechnic and as part of her course, served as an intern with a research institute. The experience inculcated in her a deep passion for scientific research, so much so that as an undergraduate, the NUS Life Sciences major would seek every opportunity to work in the laboratories during school vacations.

    Nisha is the inaugural PhD student for the four-year PhD programme jointly offered by NUS and King’s College London under the NUS Research Scholarship. As part of her graduate degree, Nisha conducted research on the mechanical signalling in podosomes. Podosomes, which are found in cells such as immune cells, break through barriers, allowing cells to move to a new location. The study of podosomes appealed to Nisha as cancer cells also had structures similar to podosomes, and she hoped that the study of the latter would provide some insight into the migration of cancer cells.

    Speaking of what drives her, Nisha said, “In science research, more than 90 per cent of your experiments are likely to fail, but there is always this excitement and promise about uncovering something new or totally unexpected. And this really motivates me to pursue science.”

    nisha_rafiq-2.jpg

    For her PhD degree, Nisha carried out research on mechanical signalling in podosomes

    In June 2016, Nisha served as the co-chair of the Gordon Research Seminar meeting on “Signalling by Adhesion Receptors”. These two-day meetings, which take place before the Gordon Research Conference, provide post-doctoral fellows and students with the opportunity to meet with established professors in their respective fields. The week-long Conferences are intensive affairs, with sessions starting at 7.30am and ending around 11.00pm daily. Earlier this year, Nisha gave two talks on fibronectin, integrins and related molecules at a Gordon Research Conference held in California, US.

    During her PhD candidature, Nisha also co-authored four research papers in peer-reviewed international journals, including Nature Communications and The Journal of Cell Biology. In spite of her busy schedule, Nisha makes time for the Women in Science Initiative at Mechanobiology Institute, Singapore (MBI) where she is currently a Research Associate. The Initiative seeks to encourage more girls to pursue science through interactive platforms such as talks and visits.

    The two-time valedictorian — the first time being upon completion of her undergraduate degree — had this to share with aspiring researchers, “They should know that they will keep failing.” Nisha opines that success is achieved when a researcher, with minimal supervision, is able to shed light in a particular field.

    Upon graduation, Nisha will continue working at MBI till the end of the year, after which she will seek a post-doctoral fellowship position in either Europe or the US. Her heart remains rooted to Singapore though, and she sees herself returning in the future to work on issues that the country faces, such as an ageing population.

     

    Source: NUS

  • Dr Khairudin Aljunied: I Wish To Apologise Unreservedly To Singaporeans And NUS

    Dr Khairudin Aljunied: I Wish To Apologise Unreservedly To Singaporeans And NUS

    Dear Friends,

    1. I refer to my posts on social media which were made on 1-2 March 2017, titled “The Imam and the Silly Convert” and “The Imam and the Wised up Convert Reloaded”.

    2. I wish to acknowledge that I had made the posts without a full understanding of the facts on the ground, and I wish to say that I disagree with the Imam making such supplications during his sermon, and I did not know that the supplications were not an extract of the Quran. I do note that the Imam has since apologised earlier yesterday for the recent incident.

    3. I also wish to say that whilst my posts could be seen as being supportive of the Imam, and I was wrong to have put them up.

    4. I had meant it as a fictional account and not in support of anyone in particular. My posts were meant to show how Muslims can settle differences between them in a peaceful and amicable way.

    5. I now wish to apologise unreservedly to Singaporeans and NUS, since my posts were supportive of what the Imam had said. I undertake not to repeat my conduct.

    Best Regards,

    Khairudin Aljunied

     

    Source: Khairudin Aljunied