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Vaping study and COVID exit strategy: News from the College
admin
2020-09-18
发布年2020
语种英语
国家英国
领域资源环境
正文(英文)
A woman vaping

Here’s a batch of fresh news and announcements from across Imperial.

From fresh insights into the health risks of e-cigarettes, to new funding for a project designing exit strategies for COVID-19 lockdowns, here is some quick-read news from across the College.

Vaping confirmed as safer than smoking

Although e-cigarettes pose some health risk, these are expected to be much less than from continuing to smoke finds a report from the independent Committee on Toxicity of Chemicals in Food, Consumer Products and the Environment (COT). This supports PHE’s approach that e-cigarettes should only be used as a stop-smoking aid. The report also states that risk to bystanders from ambient exposure to vaping is likely to be low.

Professor Alan Boobis, Chair of the COT, said ‘Our assessment on e-cigarettes largely reinforces the scientific consensus to date on their relative safety, that while not without risk they are significantly less harmful than smoking’.

Dr Nicholas Hopkinson, Chair of ASH(UK), commented ‘quitting  vaping in the long-term is sensible, though not at the expense of going back to smoking.’ He added ‘we need  to identify any toxic components in e-cigarette vapour to minimise the remaining risk as far as possible’.

Read the full report by COT: Statement on the potential toxicological risks from electronic nicotine (and non-nicotine) delivery systems (E(N)NDS – e-cigarettes) 

“Timely and important”

Over 150 people attended Imperial’s conference for Black and Minority Ethnic Early Career Researchers this week. Hosted by Imperial As One, the College’s network for Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic staff, the conference helps early career researchers stay in academia.

Speaking at the conference, Professor Alice Gast, President of Imperial College London, said: 

“I want to thank my colleagues who have worked tirelessly to organise this conference. It is both timely and important. I admire your conference theme: positive, pragmatic and practical, and support your mission to help early career colleagues gain the knowledge and tools they need to navigate academia. 

“In her TEDx talk, today’s keynote speaker, Iyiola Solanke, spoke about discrimination as a virus that could be defeated by lessons learned from the defeat of other viruses. It is an apt and important description. All of us can help not just kill the virus of discrimination, but grow a new culture of support, understanding and inclusion

“Share your experiences and wisdom, support your colleagues and stay committed to change.”

Watch the BME Conference recording.

Family-friendly employer

Director of the Enterprise Lab, Ben Mumby-Croft
Director of the Enterprise Lab, Ben Mumby-Croft

Imperial has become the only university to place in the 2020 Top 10 Employers for Working Families. The rankings based on benchmarking survey data from the charity Working Families.

The survey data was compiled by Suzanne Christopher, Senior Employee Engagement Managerand Emily Michael, Reward, Engagement & Policy Advisor. 

Suzanne commented: “We are thrilled to have moved into the top 10 employers list for Working Families. COVID-19 has shown how important it is for Imperial to encourage flexible working and we have continued running our parents workshops and Babies and Bumps sessions virtually. This is a tremendous achievement.”

Enterprise educators

The logo for the  Top 10 Employer for Working Families 2020 AwardTwo members of Imperial’s community have won prizes at this year’s National Enterprise Educators Awards.

Director of the Enterprise Lab Ben Mumby-Croft won the Pioneer in Enterprise Education Award which celebrates an exceptional individual who is actively influencing and driving transformational change and creating impact related to enterprise and entrepreneurship education or practice within their organisation and across the sector.

Imperial College Business School’s Dr Harveen Chugh won the Enterprise Catalyst Award, recognising an individual or team delivering exceptional enterprise education or practice inside or outside the curriculum. Harveen also won the People's Choice Award voted for by the public.

Organised by Enterprise Educators UK, the awards recognise excellence within enterprise and entrepreneurship in UK higher and further education.

COVID exit strategy funding

Children and a dog looking out of a bedroom windowThe UKRI is funding £113,258 towards an Imperial-led project designing new exit strategies for COVID-19 lockdowns.

Co-investigator Professor Thomas Parisini of Imperial’s Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering said: “The difficulty with intermittent lockdowns until a vaccine’s found is timing: lockdown too early, and the peak of infections shifts to a later date; too late and it won’t limit the peak. 

To circumvent this, the team, led by Professor Robert Shorten at Imperial’s Dyson School of Design Engineering with University of Glasgow, will develop periodic short-term lockdown strategies to suppress cases while encouraging social and economic activity. They will also develop network-based infection models to protect vulnerable communities.

The four-month project is a worldwide effort also involving universities in Italy, Israel, Ireland, Australia, Canada, Scotland, and France.

Want to be kept up to date on news at Imperial?

Sign up for our free quick-read daily e-newsletter, Imperial Today

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来源平台Imperial College London
文献类型新闻
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/295166
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