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Make the hours count

Marina Sara

Marina Sara, chemical engineer at the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation, uses science to address inequity

Marina Sara in the lab

Over the course of a 40-year career, we can each expect to spend 80,000 hours at work. Depending on how your week is going, this might either seem inspiring or demoralising.

The reality is, we each have a finite amount of time to make a difference in our professional lives – how can we make it count?
I first stumbled upon this 80,000 hours figure as a bright-eyed student researching potential career paths. Unsurprisingly, STEM careers feature heavily in rankings of the most impactful careers.

As the child of migrants who grew up in Lebanon during the civil war, I have been instilled with a sense of gratitude and appreciation for electricity, clean water, medicine and safety. I visited Lebanon when I was 10 years old, and was told there was no drinking water in the house, or clean water that could be used to even brush my teeth without getting ill. This shocked me and filled me with a zeal to pursue a career where I could help contribute to the needs of those without access to the basics of modern life.

For the past four years of my career, I have had the opportunity to apply this passion at ANSTO, working on key nuclear science projects – but not necessarily ones you’d expect: 

I have contributed to ANSTO’s investigation of Chronic Kidney Disease of Unknown Cause, or CKDu for short, a serious, non-communicable disease. In our focus country of Sri Lanka, over 50,000 people have been diagnosed with end stage kidney failure, with dialysis and transplant the only treatment options. For the past two and a half years, I have been working closely with Sri Lankans to address this.

The quality of drinking water has long been associated with the development of CKDu, and my work has focused on safe and sustainable access for at-risk individuals. While treatment plants deal with some of the problem, there is still the outstanding issue of treating the waste runoff which pollutes the country’s rivers.

The work I am doing with Sri Lankans has the potential to improve the lives of over 300,000 Sri Lankans through access to clean and safe drinking water. I also hope this will provide a blueprint for tackling issues associated with CKDu globally, which has the potential to impact hundreds of millions of lives across South Asia, Central America, and North Africa.

I’m currently 8,000 hours into my career — or rather 10 per cent of the way to retirement. I am grateful for the opportunities that my STEM degree and time at ANSTO have afforded me. I encourage young professionals in STEM not to count the hours (unlike me), but make the hours count.
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