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They tell you, once you take a cup of this tea every morning for say one month you're going to lose weight. And there's also things like herbal cure-it-alls, you know, lots of mixtures of herbs which they claim, oh this can cure HIV, this can cure cancer, this can cure sickle cell anemia. And there are lots of messages from health experts, even state regulatory bodies, saying, oh these things do not work. We do not have any evidence that these things will offer you the value that this will promise, that it offers. And then there are also things like unregulated fertility and aphrodisiac products. You know, people and lots of messages online will tell you, oh once you take this or you apply this topically, you're going to get better in the other room. You know, you're going to be better, your performance is going to be great, it's going to offer you this and that. Part of the reasons why this happens in a country like Nigeria is currently, Nigeria is facing very tough economic times and this has affected the cost of drugs. Most people can no longer afford medical products, so they are turning to alternative means, unorthodox means, and they're looking for ways to take care of their health while they can still, you know, keep the little money that they have. Then things like the cultural background of Nigeria and the religious background, Nigeria being a very conservative country, conversations around sex and fertility and reproductive health isn't what you ideally hear people talk about in the open. So that means, because it's very hush-hush, people seek for very secret ways to address their needs in that sphere. And lastly, here is our What in the World colleague, Maria Clara Montoya.
This can cure sickle cell anemia." And there are lots of messages from health experts, even state regulatory bodies, saying, "Oh, these things do not work.
Once it makes that cut, we can provide a template to precisely repair the DNA and correct a mutation for muscular dystrophy, sickle cell anemia, or any of the other thousands of inborn genetic diseases.
Once it makes that cut, we can provide a template to precisely repair the DNA and correct a mutation for muscular dystrophy, sickle cell anemia, or any of the other thousands of inborn genetic diseases.
And the more DNA you share, the greater chance your offspring will have a genetic disease like cystic fibrosis or sickle-cell anemia.
And so there was one mutation in the protein that makes blood that actually created sickle cell anemia.
What's interesting about it is if you are heterozygous for that, in other words, if you have two genes for it, you're going to have sickle cell anemia.
And you can see the people have evolved mutations in their receptor, sort of like a sickle cell anemia kind of thing, so they're less susceptible to the virus.
Genetic mutations are linked to at least 6,000 medical conditions from sickle cell anemia to Huntington's disease.