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When Huntington Willard, director of the
Institute for Genome Sciences & Policy (IGSP), prepared to
move into his office at his new headquarters, he requested that
a doorway be built directly between his office and his laboratory,
in addition to the existing doorway leading to the rest of the
IGSP.
His research staff knows that when the lab door is open, they have
free access to Willard the scientist. And his IGSP staff knows
that when the hall door is open, they have free access to Willard
the IGSP director.
In a similar manner, Willard, who became director in 2003, has
launched himself into the intellectual doorway business--both creating
and opening them. That's vital, he says, because Duke conceived
the IGSP as drawing on faculty members across the university, from
widely disparate fields: scientists, engineers, physicians, lawyers,
policymakers, business economists, ethicists, theologians, and
humanists. His conceptual carpentry has sought not only to construct
doorways between all of these disciplines, but also to include
them under one "metaphorical roof," as he puts it. The
IGSP should take an integrated approach to helping society cope
with the profound, pervasive impact of the genome revolution, he
says.
Still, the institute's motto, "Ask Big," reflects an
ecumenical philosophy that isn't widely appreciated at other universities. "They
don't understand putting science and policy together. Very few
places are doing that, and no place is doing it as seriously and
with the breadth and depth that we are. Frankly, the concept of
the genome revolution impacting not just science, but literally
everything else that goes on in life, does not yet resonate with
other institutions. They can't believe that we teach classes on
genomics in the English department or in the Divinity School."
When speaking of the IGSP's research aspirations, Willard emphasizes
that Ask Big does not mean Ask Everything. "We're not going
to solve every problem that's out there either on the ethical and
policy front or on the discovery front," he says. "But,
I think we can pick key questions where Duke has the right set
of tools, the right people, the right ethos to figure out approaches
that other groups can't."
A prime example of his strategy is IGSP's new Center for Genomic
Medicine. The center will create health-care systems that apply
genomic discoveries to clinical practice. "Changes in health
care frighten people," says Willard, "and very few institutions
are well positioned to grapple with what could be bewildering wholesale
changes in medicine--going from the reactionary system that we
have now to one that is prospective and highly personalized. But
that is the mark Duke is going to make. And the impact of creating
an effective genomic medicine system here will go far beyond making
one key discovery or even a handful of key discoveries. The center
really will provide an example that can be shared nationally and
internationally."
Willard envisions an IGSP where scientific discoveries will help
usher in an era of genomic medicine in which analysis of a drop
of a baby's blood can reveal whether she will be vulnerable, as
she ages, to heart attack, stroke, or cancer. But Willard believes
that IGSP's ethicists, policymakers, and legal scholars will venture
far beyond clinical advances to solve the broad social problems
that will enable this powerful knowledge to create a healthier
life for that child.
www.genome.duke.edu
--Dennis Meredith
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