
Helen Albert
Helen is an experienced freelance science journalist. Prior to going freelance, she was editor-in-chief at Labiotech in Berlin, Germany. Before moving to Germany, Helen worked at a range of different science and health-focused publications in London including The Biochemist magazine and Springer Nature’s medwireNews. She has written for a range of international publications including New Scientist, Advanced Science News, BioNews, The BMJ, Forbes, Cosmos, GEN and Inside Precision Medicine. Helen has a BSc in genetics and an MSc in biological anthropology and spent some time early in her career working in a lab at the Wellcome Sanger Institute before deciding to begin a career in journalism.
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Less than 10% of plastics are produced using recycled materials
Size of the world’s plastic problem laid out
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Innovative antibacterial strategy shows promise for treating infections
New antibiotic mechanism sees molecule infiltrate bacterial cells and destroy them from the inside
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Click chemistry offers new, efficient process to produce unique cancer-fighting antibodies
Chemical approach is fast and flexible and could be an alternative o using protein engineering
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Biocatalytic process shows promise for large-scale medicinal oligonucleotide production
Promising nucleic acid therapies could be made more cheaply, greenly and simply
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Bioelectric bacteria-powered sensor detects water contaminants in real time
Synthetic biology harnessed to detect endocrine disruptor and thiosulfate
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Software from Cambridge crystallographic experts could save pharma industry millions
Informatic tools will help drug formulators understand particle behaviour in their final product
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Edible, fluorescent silk tags could help stem tide of counterfeit medicines
Marker could be a simple answer to ensuring provenance of drugs
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Biogas reactor offers a route to decentralising ‘green’ hydrogen production
Chemical looping process produces ultra-pure hydrogen from methane
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Contact lenses with gold nanoparticles can help correct colour blindness
Soft lenses can correct red–green colour vision deficiency