FutSci crowdfunding platform for new and rare disease research makes its debut

Published: 4-Jun-2015

Fills gaps in traditional funding for life sciences say co-founders


Futsci, claimed to be the first crowdfunding platform run by scientists and dedicated to funding research, innovation and technology in life sciences, has been launched this week.

Molecular biologist Dr Deepika Kassen and Dr Gayathri Perera, a dermatologist and immunologist, who are both based in the UK, have launched the platform, said the idea evolved during years of experience at the sharp end of life science research and funding.

Futsci will provide a platform where accredited researchers and scientists can post any project in need of funding, at any stage, and donors worldwide can select the individual projects they wish to support, with donations in multiple currencies starting at £1.00, and with no upper limit.

All projects will be vetted prior to going live on the platform and all scientists will be affiliated with recognised institutes.

Kassen said: 'There's a major funding gap for life sciences in the UK. It isn't just that there's been no life sciences crowdfunding platform before FutSci; it's also an absence of grants and funds for research into less well-known diseases and conditions, and a dearth of small-scale grants and funds for early stage projects.

'Particularly, there's almost no funding for blue-sky thinking and very little support for researchers in the early stages of their careers. It's little wonder the majority of scientists who cannot access funding leave science altogether, as they cannot sustain themselves and or their research. Every year in the UK there's a huge loss of scientific knowledge and expertise: it's a silent brain-drain.'

There's a major funding gap for life sciences in the UK

Perera added: 'This is what FutSci is built for. With FutSci, we will engage the public in helping to fund basic research projects, such as pilots that could then go on to receive grants, and research into rare diseases that may have affected them or their friends and family, and we'll give them a say in choosing the research that's important to them.'

Further benefits of FutSci are its engagement with schools and encouragement of young people to develop their interests in science, coupled with a News and Views section to provide up-to-date reviews of current trends in life science research and scientific advancements, providing information on the typical process, costs and people involved.

'We want to foster public engagement in bioscience and biomedical research and to encourage young people to consider a science career. Scientists can be approached by schools to get a true picture of what it's like to study for a science degree, what happens in a lab, the different kinds of science available and also what doors can be opened by having a science degree, with an emphasis on promoting and retaining women in science,' added Kassen.

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