Medical
Research
Research
is one of the most important fields of medicine. It provides
health care professionals with new knowledge and technology
for better diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of disease.
Medical
research often combines medicine with related fields of biology,
and is called biomedical research. Research can be basic or
applied. Basic, or fundamental, research has no immediate
practical application. Basic cancer research, for instance,
may try to identify gene mutations that turn a healthy cell
malignant. While this information does not have immediate
clinical value, it generates knowledge that often leads to
better care for patients. Applied research has a specific
practical goal, such as development of a better drug for breast
cancer. The early stages of biomedical research usually occur
in a laboratory. As scientists gain more knowledge in a particular
area, they begin studies on humans. These studies often take
place in hospitals or clinics and are called clinical research.
Clinical research usually is performed by multidisciplinary
teams, rather than by individual scientists working alone.
These groups of men and women have knowledge and skills in
different areas, or disciplines, of science. A multidisciplinary
biomedical research team may include biochemists, geneticists,
physiologists, and physicians. Each team member approaches
the problem from a different side and shares knowledge with
the group. This multidisciplinary approach increases the chances
of solving a problem or developing a new treatment.
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