Multimedia Reporting (Summer 2020)

Jimmy’s Radio Project-Final

Host intro: With Covid-19 putting most human research to a halt, labs across the tri-state area are struggling to reopen their facilities. James Kyreakedes spoke to a research assistant about the impact the pandemic has had on their lab.

 

Ambi: nat sounds of typing on a keyboard

 

Track: I’m here with Zuzanna, a research assistant at a memory lab at Rutgers University, looking at biomarkers of Alzheimer’s disease. She is finishing a lab report, typing away in her suburban New Jersey home.

 

ACT: ZUZANNA: At the end of March all of our research activities were shut down completely until further notice. So, everybody has had to work from home, myself included. It’s been…there’s definitely been a lot of changes.

 

Track: Without any face-to-face interactions, her work day looks very different.

 

ACT: ZUZANNA: It’s definitely been a big transition for me personally, um I’m not used to just looking at data for 5-6 hours a day. It’s been a little exhausting honestly.

 

Track: Her lab was faced with new challenges since the pandemic, working with a high-risk population.

 

ACT: ZUZANNA: My job before was mostly testing and working face-to-face with the older participants usually in their 70s and their 80s, they’re now the most vulnerable population. So, we have had to plan what we’re going to do, essentially for the rest of the year, because we’re not sure when we’ll be able to see these participants in person again.

 

Track: Although skeptical, her lab is still hopeful about resuming research with the right precautions in place.

 

ACT: ZUZANNA: We’re definitely taking into consideration their age and the fact that even just getting to our location is going to be putting them at risk. So, for the past few weeks we are trying to plan a different testing site. We’re thinking of maybe moving our testing to a church nearby where there is a lot of room. So right now it’s really just a waiting game.

 

Track: Aside from the difficulties imposed by working with a high-risk population, the lab is going to have a hard time designating research assistants to test the participants.

 

ACT: ZUZANNA: Usually, in a research lab, half of the staff were undergraduate students who were looking for some research experience, but because all of these classes are now going to be remote, even in the fall, we lost almost half of our staff.

 

 

Track: Although some research has been put to a halt due to COVID-19, other research has been prioritized.

 

ACT: ZUZANNA: I do plan on pursuing a career in research, so this has definitely been an eye-opener for me. We have had a lot of budget cuts at our lab and I know that moving forward there is going to be an emphasis on Covid-related research, and maybe in the future even other medical research as opposed to what I am looking at now, which is memory and neuroscience.

 

Track: As of now most research activities at Rutgers University are on hold. Everyone is patiently waiting as we track the spread of Covid19 and wait for new information.

 

For Baruch College, this is James Kyreakedes in Sayreville New Jersey