Crowdsourced project research on Parkinson’s disease
Google co-founder Sergey Brin wants to crowdsource project Providing research on Parkinson’s disease Wants 10,000 to participate in efforts.
Mr Brin is funding a crowd-sourcing project to gather information about Parkinsons disease, an illness suffered by his mother. Mr Brin reportedly has an elevated risk of Parkinson’s and has between a 20 to 80 per cent of contracting the disease.
“I kind of give myself 50-50 odds of getting Parkinson’s in 20 or so years, 25 years,” the New York Times reported Brin as saying.
“But I also give it a 50-50 shot of medicine catching up to be able to deal with it.”
He wants 10,000 people to fill out an online survey and provide genetic scans to get a clearer picture of how the disease manifests, help find risk factors and ultimately provide treatment.
The Google co-founder is working in conjunction with his wife Anne Wojcicki’s genetics testing company 23andMe, and will provide expensive genetic testing for vastly reduced amount. In Australia, genetic testing for known gene mutations that can cause Parkinson’s disease can cost up to $2400.
Mr Brin will be the one to fund the research, which is estimated to be several millions of dollars. But Associate Professor Kay Double from the Prince Of Wales Medical Institute says that, while the project may provide valuable information, it is unlikely to find a cure.
“If it was well designed, it may assist finding bio-markers or genetic markers for the disease,” Professor Double said.
“It may also find new risk factors in the environment, but it’s unlikely to find a cure.
“It’s going to give you an indication of why people are getting the disease.”
Prof Double says the greatest risk factor is age.
In 2005, there were 63,000 known sufferers of Parkinson’s in Australia, and that number could reach 126,000 by 2030 due to Australia’s ageing population, according to Prof Double.













Crowdsourcing, a word that coined in the last few years to describe the process by which an organization puts out a request to the crowd for information, ideas and solutions.




