The Development of Computational Biology in South Africa: Successes Achieved and Lessons Learnt
Bioinformatics is now a critical skill in many research and commercial environments as biological data are increasing in both size and complexity. South African researchers recognized this need in the mid-1990s and responded by working with the government as well as international bodies to develop initiatives to build bioinformatics capacity in the country. Significant injections of support from these bodies provided a springboard for the establishment of computational biology units at multiple universities throughout the country, which took on teaching, basic research and support roles. Several challenges were encountered, for example with unreliability of funding, lack of skills, and lack of infrastructure. However, the bioinformatics community worked together to overcome these, and South Africa is now arguably the leading country in bioinformatics on the African continent. Here we discuss how the discipline developed in the country, highlighting the challenges, successes, and lessons learnt.
Funding
Medical Research Council (MRC) of the Republic of South Africa (MRC-RFA-UFSP-01-2013/UKZN HIVEPI)
National Institutes of Health Common Fund (grant number U41HG006941)
History
Publisher
Stellenbosch UniversityContributor
Mulder, NJ; Christoffels, A; de Oliveira, T; Gamieldien, J; Hazelhurst, S; Joubert, F; Kumuthini, J; Pillay, CS; Snoep, JL; Bishop, OT; & Tiffin, N.Date
2016-02-04Format
.pdf .png .tiff .pptLanguage
enGeographical Location
South AfricaAcademic Group
- Medicine and Health Sciences
Recommended Citation
Mulder, NJ, Christoffels, A, de Oliveira, T, Gamieldien, J, Hazelhurst, S, Joubert, F, Kumuthini, J, Pillay, CS, Snoep, JL, Bishop, OT & Tiffin, N. 2016. The Development of Computational Biology in South Africa: Successes Achieved and Lessons Learnt. Stellenbosch University. Dataset. DOI: https://doi.org/10.25413/sun.28794158Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
- Goal 3: GOOD HEALTH & WELL-BEING
- Goal 9: INDUSTRY, INNOVATION & INFRASTRUCTURE