| HAVERFORD
BIOLOGY PROFESSOR AWARDED PRESTIGIOUS FELLOWSHIP
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Iruka Okeke |
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A Haverford professor has been awarded a prestigious
fellowship from the Science and Society Foundation of Zurich, Switzerland.
Assistant Professor of Biology Iruka Okeke is one of only three
international scholars to receive this year’s Branco Weiss
Fellowship, traditionally given to researchers in the life sciences
whose work can be viewed through a social and cultural context.
Okeke will receive up to five years of support from the Foundation
for her research on drug resistance of the E. coli bacterium,
specifically for a proposal titled Antimicrobial Resistance
in West Africa: Magnitude and Containment. “The fellowship
will support my studies of the nature, mechanism, and predisposing
factors for the spread of genetic material encoding resistance in
E. coli from West Africa,” she says.
The Science and Society Foundation provides assistance to researchers
in the natural sciences whose work extends to include social and
cultural perspectives, and Okeke is no exception. “The emergence
and spread of resistant bacteria is promoted by human activities,”
she says. “I am interested in identifying human determinants
that may encourage the spread of resistant bacteria, particularly
in developing countries. Ultimately, my research is aimed at working
with affected communities to identify practicable and acceptable
interventions for resistance control.”
Okeke joined Haverford’s faculty in 2002. Previously, she
was a career development lecturer in the department of biomedical
sciences at the University of Bradford, UK, with a research specialty
in molecular epidemiology and the pathogenesis of E. coli.
She is currently an advisor to the Alliance for the Prudent Use
of Antibiotics (APUA) International.
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