Dr. Amy Lee
@minisciencegirl.bsky.social
2.4K followers 1.7K following 310 posts
Assistant Professor @ SFU MBB | Systems Biology of Host-Pathogen | Vaccinology | Neonatal Sepsis | Pathogen Genomics | Loves data, food & art.
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Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
sarahjeong.bsky.social
thinking about how fucked up it is to give kids measles on purpose and then withhold tylenol from them
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
thedailyshow.com
The following is REAL footage from Portland, 2025. Viewer discretion is advised.
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
profannawatts.bsky.social
Lol the Nobels can't even acknowledge women's contribution to discovery. But sure let's acknowledge The Machines.
Headline from an article in Nature this week that states "Prizes must recognize machine contributions to discovery. The future of science will be written by humans and machines together. Awards should reflect that reality."
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
drruth.bsky.social
The economic costs and social costs of splitting the MMR into 3 separate vaccines.
tom.medsky.social
The United States gives approximately 6.6 million doses of MMR per year. Each single dose vial contains 1.76 grams of glass, rubber, and aluminum. Add another 3 grams each for the syringe and needle.

This one change will add 62.8 metric tons of SHARPS BIOHAZARD WASTE per year.
elizabethjacobs.bsky.social
The MMR shot is safe and effective, and there is no credible evidence otherwise.

Breaking MMR into three shots means 3x more copays at the doctor’s office, 3x more hours of missed work, 3x more bummed out kiddos, and probably more than 3x as many kids who aren’t fully vaccinated.
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
carlzimmer.com
Today my @nytimes.com colleagues and I are launching a new series called Lost Science. We interview US scientists who can no longer discover something new about our world, thanks to this year‘s cuts. Here is my first interview with a scientist who studied bees and fires. Gift link: nyti.ms/3IWXbiE
nyti.ms
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
kojamf.bsky.social
Dr. Jane Goodall filmed an interview with Netflix in March 2025 that she understood would only be released after her death.
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
nizet.bsky.social
🅶🆁🅰🅼-🅽🅴🅶🅰🆃🅸🆅🅴
🅰🅼🆁 🅰🆃 🅰🅻🅰🆁🅼🅸🅽🅶
🅻🅴🆅🅴🅻🆂 🅸🅽 🆃🅷🅴
🅽🅴🆆🅱🅾🆁🅽 🅽🆄🆁🆂🅴🆁🆈

⚠️ ~80% of neonatal sepsis cases in 10 Asian hospitals caused by Gram-negative bacteria. 𝘒𝘭𝘦𝘣𝘴𝘪𝘦𝘭𝘭𝘢 and 𝘈𝘤𝘪𝘯𝘦𝘵𝘰𝘣𝘢𝘤𝘵𝘦𝘳 strains had extremely high AMR levels, leaving few effective antibiotics for newborns

www.thelancet.com/journals/lan...
Pathogen distribution and antimicrobial resistance among neonatal bloodstream infections in Southeast Asia: results from NeoSEAP, a multicentre retrospective study
Neonatal sepsis in tertiary hospitals in Southeast Asia is predominantly caused by gram-negative bacteria, with high rates of non-susceptibility to commonly prescribed antibiotics.
www.thelancet.com
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
camri-igs.bsky.social
We're hiring a #postdoc with knowledge of the #microbiome, #microbiology, #bioinformatics, #computationalbiology to understand the role of the vaginal microbiome in women's health. #Baltimore #womenshealth
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
carolekingofficial.bsky.social
With the passing of Jane Goodall today, we lost one of the most consequential voices in environmental science and animal behavior. In 2002, she said, “We have found that…there isn't a sharp line dividing humans from the rest of the animal kingdom.”
(Continued in comments)
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
halllab.bsky.social
Come join us 2-4th March 2026 for a cracking #microbiome conference in Hinxton UK! Speaker line up is AMAZING and lots of opportunities for ECRs for selected talks, flash talks and posters.

Bursaries are also available!

See details below 👇
eventswcs.bsky.social
Showcase your microbiome research at our 2026 conference! #Microbiome26

Demonstrate how #genomics tools and technologies are contributing to a deeper understanding of the microbiome.

🗓️ 2-4 March
Submit an abstract by 24 November ✍🏼

📎 bit.ly/4kttBOX
#MicrobiomeSky #AcademicSky
Wellcome Connecting Science hybrid conference 
Microbiome Interactions in Health and Disease

Conference dates: 2-4 March 2026
Location: Hinxton Hall Conference Centre, Wellcome Genome Campus, UK and online

Bursary and abstract deadline: 24 November 2025 
Registration deadline
In person: 2 February 
Virtual: 14 February
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
dotnagy.bsky.social
To summarise our recent pre-print: Autocycler, the automated consensus assembler, when used with Nanopore long-read only Enterobacterales assemblies, produces more complete chromosomes and plasmids, with an accuracy comparable to hybrid assemblies.
Figure 2 from my recently pre-printed manuscript on the completeness and accuracy of Nanopore long-read only bacterial genome assembly for Enterobacterales. a) tile plot of chromosome circularisation, with assembler on the x-axis and sample on the y-axis, shows that the consensus long-read only assembler, Autocycler, circularised more chromosomes at 95% (87/92) than any other long-read or hybrid assembler. b) complex upset plot of plasmid reconstruction, showing that the best plasmid reconstruction was achieved by long-read assemblers incorporating the separate plasmid assembly tool, Plassembler, namely Autocycler and Hybracter, reconstructing >96% of plasmids.
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
markhoofnagle.medsky.social
Gonna livestream this for sure. These guys are the actual scientists at war with govt reppression of important science that has life and death consequence.

Not the whiny sexpests like Krauss who are just mad they don’t get to fly on the Lolita express anymore. Hate that I have to clarify that.
michaelemann.bsky.social
Please come out (or participate via livestream) for our #ScienceUnderSiege event at the storied DC bookstore @politicsprose.bsky.social, featuring my co-author @peterhotezmdphd.bsky.social & yours truly,
Thursday Oct 2: politics-prose.com/mann-hotez
advertisement for event
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
c0nc0rdance.bsky.social
It's the anniversary of Alexander Fleming returning from summer break & finding his Staph. aureus culture plate had been left open with mold growing on it that killed bacteria.

Let's focus on what came next: how do we go from an agar plate in 1928 to 2.3 million doses ready on D-Day, June 1944?
Synthetic Production of Penicillin Professor Alexander Fleming, holder of the Chair of Bacteriology at London University, who first discovered the mould Penicillin Notatum. Here in his laboratory at St Mary's, Paddington, London (1943).
This photograph TR 1468 comes from the collections of the Imperial War Museums.
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
maryfernando.bsky.social
Reading tributes to Dr. Darren Markland and am verklempt by how many of you he touched by telling the truth.

“It was public criticism of power that only an intensive-care doctor doing the hard work during the pandemic could fling about without being fired.”

edifyedmonton.com/urban/innova...
A photo of Dr. Maryland and his buddy, Hobbes the dog.
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
jdrakephd.bsky.social
Newly expanded version of my guide to scientific writing -- known as the “15 steps” -- published in PLOS Computational Biology. Special thanks to Éric Marty for creating a fantastic visualization.

Check it out: journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol...

#ScientificWriting #PLOSComputationalBiology
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
atrupar.com
Hillary Clinton: "When I hear people like Kennedy talking about getting back to a time where we aren't vaccinating, we're drinking raw milk - yeah, & people didn't live! I mean, this is so crazy, it's so wrongheaded, it's so shortsighted and it's going to cause deaths... it already is costing lives"
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
rbreich.bsky.social
Remember: If we allow ourselves to fall into fatalism, or wallow in disappointment, or become resigned to what is rather than what should be, we will lose the long game.

The greatest enemy of positive social change is cynicism about what can be changed.
minisciencegirl.bsky.social
Yep. I am looking at you, liquid handling robots.
pathogenomenick.bsky.social
A bit like spiralling publication costs we need to start having a proper discussion around lab equipment servicing costs. These are often completely disproportionate to the cost of instrument and the service that is provided and seem to serve as a cash cow for vendors.
Reposted by Dr. Amy Lee
markhisted.org
The New York Times piece today about US science is terrible and wrong—in many ways.

I could write a whole article about this, but as one example:

“To close observers, the original crisis began well before any of this…”
No. I’m a close observer of science, and this is incorrect.