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'''"[[Journal:How could the ethical management of health data in the medical field inform police use of DNA?|How could the ethical management of health data in the medical field inform police use of DNA?]]"'''
<div style="float: left; margin: 0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0em;">[[File:Fig1 Huang iScience2022 25-8.jpg|240px]]</div>
'''"[[Journal:Elegancy: Digitizing the wisdom from laboratories to the cloud with free no-code platform|Elegancy: Digitizing the wisdom from laboratories to the cloud with free no-code platform]]"'''


Various events paved the way for the production of ethical norms regulating biomedical practices, from the Nuremberg Code (1947)—produced by the international trial of Nazi regime leaders and collaborators—and the Declaration of Helsinki by the World Medical Association (1964) to the invention of the term “bioethics” by American biologist Van Rensselaer Potter. The ethics of biomedicine has given rise to various controversies—particularly in the fields of newborn screening, prenatal screening, and cloning—resulting in the institutionalization of ethical questions in the biomedical world of genetics. In 1994, France passed legislation (commonly known as the “bioethics laws”) to regulate medical practices in genetics. The medical community has also organized itself in order to manage ethical issues relating to its decisions, with a view to handling “practices with many strong uncertainties” and enabling clinical judgments and decisions to be made not by individual practitioners but rather by multidisciplinary groups drawing on different modes of judgment and forms of expertise. Thus, the biomedical approach to genetics has been characterized by various debates and the existence of public controversies. ('''[[Journal:How could the ethical management of health data in the medical field inform police use of DNA?|Full article...]]''')<br />
One of the top priorities in any [[laboratory]] is [[Archival informatics|archiving]] experimental data in the most secure, efficient, and errorless way. It is especially important to those in chemical and biological research, for it is more likely to damage experiment records. In addition, the transmission of experiment results from paper to electronic devices is time-consuming and redundant. Therefore, we introduce an [[Open-source software|open-source]] no-code [[electronic laboratory notebook]] (ELN), Elegancy, a [[Cloud computing|cloud-based]]/standalone web service distributed as a Docker image. Elegancy fits all laboratories but is specially equipped with several features benefitting biochemical laboratories. It can be accessed via various web browsers, allowing researchers to upload photos or audio recordings directly from their mobile devices. Elegancy also contains a meeting arrangement module, audit/revision control, and laboratory supply management system. We believe Elegancy could help the scientific research community gather evidence, share information, reorganize knowledge, and digitize laboratory works with greater ease and security ... ('''[[Journal:Elegancy: Digitizing the wisdom from laboratories to the cloud with free no-code platform|Full article...]]''')<br />
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Latest revision as of 17:08, 10 April 2023

Fig1 Huang iScience2022 25-8.jpg

"Elegancy: Digitizing the wisdom from laboratories to the cloud with free no-code platform"

One of the top priorities in any laboratory is archiving experimental data in the most secure, efficient, and errorless way. It is especially important to those in chemical and biological research, for it is more likely to damage experiment records. In addition, the transmission of experiment results from paper to electronic devices is time-consuming and redundant. Therefore, we introduce an open-source no-code electronic laboratory notebook (ELN), Elegancy, a cloud-based/standalone web service distributed as a Docker image. Elegancy fits all laboratories but is specially equipped with several features benefitting biochemical laboratories. It can be accessed via various web browsers, allowing researchers to upload photos or audio recordings directly from their mobile devices. Elegancy also contains a meeting arrangement module, audit/revision control, and laboratory supply management system. We believe Elegancy could help the scientific research community gather evidence, share information, reorganize knowledge, and digitize laboratory works with greater ease and security ... (Full article...)

Recently featured: