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1.
2022 IEEE IFEES World Engineering Education Forum - Global Engineering Deans Council, WEEF-GEDC 2022 ; 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2223175

ABSTRACT

The number of students of African origin traveling abroad for postgraduate engineering education has increased over the last 30 years. Studying abroad provides unique experiences and benefits for African students and the host country. These experiences place international scholars in an ideal position to reflect on the different experiences between the practices, attitudes, social diversity, and competency development they find in their new study destinations and hence can make suggestions for improvement in their home and host countries. This paper explores the experience, reflections, and adaptation of African scholars to their international educational context during the COVID pandemic, using a collaborative autoethnography methodology. Elements of the theoretical frameworks of acculturation theory and adaptability theory were used in the collection, analysis, and discussion of the paper to address the following research questions: 1) What are the experiences and perspectives of African Diaspora graduate scholars in undertaking engineering education studies in the US? 2) What improvements are suggested for the study environments in their home countries and in the US? The findings raise provocative thoughts about the culture of and the philosophies behind the present nature of instruction, assessment, student supervision, experiences, and workload in the US and African countries. We argue for a need to disrupt several realities that have become a norm for African diaspora students and suggest how this can be done drawing from our own experiences within these unique environments. © 2022 IEEE.

2.
J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 62(6): 1761-1764, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2004191

ABSTRACT

The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has escalated the ongoing problem of critical medication shortages, which has serious implications for the health of our patients. Currently, active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) are synthesized in large-scale batch operations and shipped to drug product manufacturers, where they are produced on a large scale at centralized facilities. In the centralized drug manufacturing process, the formulation components, operations, and packaging are structured to favor long-term storage and shipment of resultant medicines to the point of care, making this process vulnerable to supply chain disruptions. We propose a rethinking of the drug manufacturing paradigm with an upgraded pharmaceutical compounding-based manufacturing paradigm. This paradigm will be based on integration of continuous manufacturing of APIs and manufacturing of medicines at the point of care with application of machine learning, artificial intelligence, and 3-dimensional printing. This paradigm will support implementation of precision medicine and customization according to patients' needs. The new model of drug manufacturing will be less dependent on the supply chain while ensuring availability of medicines in a cost-effective manner.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 Drug Treatment , Pharmacy , Humans , Technology, Pharmaceutical/methods , Drug Industry , Artificial Intelligence , Pharmaceutical Preparations
3.
Accounting, Auditing and Accountability Journal ; 2021.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-1290061

ABSTRACT

Purpose: The authors unpack the critical role of rhetoric in developing and justifying the New Zealand (NZ) government's coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) lockdown strategy. Design/methodology/approach: Using Green's (2004) theory of rhetorical diffusion, the authors analysed government documents and media releases before, during and after the lockdown to reconstruct the government's rationale. Findings: The blending of kairos (sense of urgency and “right” time to act), ethos (emphasis on “saving lives”), pathos (fear of disruption and death) and selective use of health-based logos (shrinking infection rates), prompted fast initial adoption of the lockdown. However, support for the rhetoric wavered post-lockdown as absence of robust logos became apparent to the public. Research limitations/implications: The authors implicate the role of rhetoric in decision-makers’ ability to successfully elicit support for a new practice under urgency and the right moment to act using emotionalisation and moralisation. The assessment of the NZ government's response strategy provides insights decision-makers could glean in developing policies to tame the virus. Practical implications: This study’s analysis demonstrates the unsustainability of rhetoric in the absence of reliable information. Originality/value: The authors demonstrate the consequences of limited (intermittent) evidence and disregard for accounting/accountability data in public policy decisions under a rhetorical strategy. © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited.

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