Your average American
14-year-old just started his or her freshman year in high school. They might be
trying out for their school basketball team for winter sports or they could be
auditioning for the school play.
But Kara Fan is not
your run-of-the-mill 14-year-old. She is America’s Top Young
Scientist.
“The moment before
they called my name, I was really nervous because like the other finalists…
their presentations are really good and I thought like they would win,” the San
Diego native told Yahoo Finance. “When they announced my name, I was really
surprised actually.”
To win that claim,
Fan’s nano-particle liquid bandage had to surpass the experiments of hundreds
of fifth to eighth graders as well as nine other finalists. The competition
encouraged the participants to solve a global issue and included runner-up
Caroline Crouchley’s environmentally safer and sustainable public transport
train and fourth-place Camellia Sharma’s underground water leakage system.
‘I
can spread the awareness of the antibiotic crisis’
Fan started
developing her liquid bandage – using lemon leaf, silver nitrate, and a
water-soluble polymer – in April 2019 to fight the overuse of antibiotics.
According to the CDC,
roughly 2 million people every year suffer a bacterial infection in the U.S.
and about 23,000 passed away as a result. If left alone, a UN
study reported, drug-resistant diseases or the “superbug” could lead
to 10 million deaths across the globe by 2050.
“I can spread the
awareness of the antibiotic crisis and just show them the statistics,” Fan
said. “The overuse of antibiotics have led to antibiotic resistance infections
and it’s going to kill a lot of people.”
When Fan’s sprayable
bandage dries on a person’s skin, it creates a thin layer that protects the
wounded area while breaking the cell wall and killing the bacteria on the skin.
After experimenting with copper nitrate to fight bacteria, switching to the
silver nitrate ended up being the major catalyst to seeing results for her
award-winning project.
“Thousands of years
ago, ancient people would use copper and silver to eat with and they would
drink water from like copper bowls to kill bacteria,” Fan explained. “I found
out that it didn’t work. So I used nano silver.”
Sir Alexander
Fleming’s discovery of penicillin – a type of antibiotic – is Fan’s favorite
scientific discovery. That said, she doesn’t think humans should rely too
heavily on penicillin.
“It has saved
millions of lives,” she said. “But since it’s been misused and overused, we
should be aware of this crisis.”
Following her years
at Westview High School, Fan hopes to continue her biology track at Stanford
University. Along with the $25,000 cash prize she won on October 29, becoming
America’s Top Young Scientist may help get the private university’s attention. –
Yahoo
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