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Dr. HP Lee is a research professor and Ph.D. of College of pharmacy at Chungbuk National University. After 17 years of experience in overseas business as a member of LG International and LG Life Sciences, he is currently studying the development of cancer, dementia and inflammatory diseases at the university and the Innovative Cancer Therapeutic Research Center and also teaches at graduate school.
TV News
9:00 pm broadcast on KBS TV news
[KBS News9] November 30, 2016
' Current animal carcass burial manual' ...
from the selection, all proceed to 'fist old fashioned' ...
Academics have suggested basic research, but the city and county are not able to afford the budget needed for landfilling.
Dr. HP Lee / Professor, College of Pharmacy, Chungbuk National University
"I tried to study pigs or large animals, but I had to start the initial study in the other direction because there was no funding for the research ... When I consulted City, the City representative should consult with the County representative, who again he need to talk to the government ... we don't know who decides this budget. "
In order to break the old-fashioned manual, there is a high voice that it is urgent to operate a control tower that oversees the central and local governments.
9:00 pm broadcast on KBS TV news
[KBS News9] January 11, 2017
Poor Livestock Mortality Management and Dead Body Burial Treatment…
Academics call for action on secondary infections
We have reported a hole in animal mortality management. There is concern about side effects, but there is no sign of improvement by the government. In response, the academic community urged a countermeasure.
A farmhouse that mixes dead chickens and ducks with manure or feeds them to other animals. This poor management of poultry mortality is considered a cause of the spread of avian influenza.
Although avian influenza prevailed in the early 2000s, Thailand has now become a clean country for exporting chickens to Korea because of the effects of quarantine measures in livestock storage.
Academics have suggested this improvement to some cities during the worst avian influenza outbreak, but it has not been accepted. This is because it is not in the manual.
Dr. HP Lee / Professor, College of Pharmacy, Chungbuk National University
"I haven't had a chance to use the methods I've studied so far because there's no way for officials or field experts to implement the budget for new treatments not listed in the existing manual."
In the early days, the academic community suggested that they prepare countermeasures to the National Coordination Office.
9:00 pm broadcast on KBS TV news
[KBS News9] November 30, 2016
Five years have passed since they were buried under foot and mouth disease and avian influenza. However, the reason why the animal carcass is not degraded is that it is due to the absence of anaerobes.
Dr. HP Lee / Professor, College of Pharmacy, Chungbuk National University
"The way we buried animal carcasses in the ground is a closed process, which means that anaerobic microorganisms are required for animal carcasses to be processed in plastic tanks. But most microbial products on the market are aerobic."
8:00 pm Special Report KBS TV broadcasting
[KBS SisaPlus / Special 60 minutes Report broadcast]
'Six years after the outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease, why didn't animal carcasses break down?'
-Finding solutions to the carcass processing
-Experts in each field come together to suggest a solution.
In particular, Professor HP Lee, College of Pharmacy, Chungbuk National University reveals practical clues that can be solved through his recent research results.
Scientific Research Papers
MMPP Patented & on Techology Transfer
A total of eight studies, including this study, have applied for the 4 key patents related to MMPP substance (1.Manufacturing method patent, 2.Cancer treatment patent, 3.Inflammatory disease treatment patent, 4.Alzheimer's disease treatment patent).
Patents have already been registered in Korea and the United States, and China is about to confirm the final license. The value of this patent is known to exceed USD 8 million and technology transfer is underway.
Commercialization as Cosmetics for Atopic disease
Based on this paper, in 2017, we were able to launch atopy cosmetics using astaxanthin for the first time in the cosmetics industry. We first identified a mechanism by which astaxanthin inhibits atopic symptoms by blocking the NF-kB inflammatory pathway.