Financial Accountant in East London | Accountant | Job Mail | 5035830
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Our client based in East London is looking for a Financial Account: Education & Qualification:
BCom in Finance, Accounting Sciences, Financial Accounting, Financial Management – 5 Years experience
– Excellent Mathematical Skills
– Solid understanding of Finance
– Critical thinking and Problem Solving skills
– Attention to detail
– Deadline Oriented
– Analysing Financial Data
– Filing / Paper Management
– Excel Competence
– Willingness to learn – Management Reporting
– Self-Management
– Organisational skills
EXPERIENCE AND QUALIFICATIONS/TRAINING
• Grade 12
• National Diploma in Engineering (Mechanical and/or Electrical)
• 2 – 5 years’ experience in hospital environment essential
• Fault finding capability is necessary
• Minimum of 5 years handyman practical knowledge
• Proven experience as a maintenance manager or supervisor essential.
• Knowledge and understanding of basic elements of Health and Safety
• Solid understanding of technical aspects of plumbing, carpentry, electrical systems, nurse call-bell systems air conditioning etc
• Working knowledge of the facilities machines and medical equipment.
• Ability to manage maintenance cost within department and hospital at large.
• Willingness to work after hours, weekends and public holidays when necessary.
• Driver’s License with own transport
• Must be physically able to do repairs and maintenance himself.
• Must be computer literate in MS Office etc
KEY COMPETENCIES
• People and patient centredness
• Team Leadership
• Manage “stressful” environment/situations
• Methodical, precise and pro-active
• Attention to detail, System orientated, Organized and Flexible
• Commitment
• Diversity
• Integrity
• Accountability
If you meet the above criteria and have the relevant experience and attributes, please submit your CV to Samantha at samanthat@havenhealth.net clearly marked “MMHR” with three (3) contactable references.
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Cape Union Mart International (Pty) Ltd has been equipping South African adventurers since 1933, and is South Africa’s favourite outdoor adventure store. Stocking everything one needs for outdoor pursuits – including hiking, camping, trail running, mountain biking, snow sports, travel and more – Cape Union Mart is an essential first step in every adventure. Cape Union Mart has stores across South Africa, and in Namibia and Botswana.
In the earliest days of the pandemic, many immunologists, including me, assumed that patients who produced high quantities of antibodies early in infection would be free from disease. We were wrong.
Several months into studying Covid-19, like other scientists, I’ve come to realize the picture is far more complicated. A recent research study published by my colleagues and me adds more evidence to the idea that in some patients, preventing dysregulated immune system responses may be as important as treating the virus itself.
I am an immunologist at Emory University working under the direction of Dr. Ignacio Sanz, Emory’s chief of rheumatology. Immune dysregulation is our specialty.
Inflammation in Covid-19
A harrowing turn in the Covid-19 pandemic occurred with the realization that the immune system’s power in fighting infection was sometimes pyrrhic. In patients with severe Covid-19 infections, evidence emerged that the inflammatory process used to fight the SARS-CoV-2 virus were, in addition to fighting the virus, potentially responsible for harming the patient. Clinical studies described so-called cytokine storms in which the immune system produced an overwhelming quantity of inflammatory molecules, antibodies triggering dangerous blood clots and inflammation of multiple organ systems, including blood vessels, in Covid-recovered children. All these were warning signs that in some patients, immune responses to the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which causes Covid-19, may have tipped from healing to destructive.
Quick thinking and courageous decisions made by physicians on the front lines led to the use of steroids, medicines that dampen the immune response, early on in the course of infection of hospitalized patients. This approach has saved lives.
But it’s not yet clear what parts of the immune system physicians are dampening that is having the effect. Understanding the nature of immune dysregulation in Covid-19 could help identify patients in whom these treatments are most effective. It may even justify more targeted and powerful approaches for modulating the immune system currently reserved for autoimmune diseases.
The right antibodies take time
Antibodies are powerful weapons. Produced by white blood cells called B cells, they latch onto infectious agents like viruses and bacteria and prevent them from infecting your healthy cells. These antibody-virus aggregates unleash powerful inflammatory reactions and serve as homing beacons that allow the rest of your immune system to target the pathogens efficiently. In some circumstances, they can even kill.
Antibodies are so powerful that cases of mistaken identity – when a B cell produces antibodies that attack a person’s own cells – can lead to widespread organ damage and establish a perpetual cycle of immune self-targeting. We refer to this state of self-destruction as an autoimmune disease.
To avoid autoimmune disaster, and to ensure effective response against the invading pathogen, B cells undergo a training process. Those that respond to the virus refine their antibodies and mature, ensuring potent antibodies capable of disabling the invader. B cells that target your own tissue are destroyed.
But that maturation process takes time. Two weeks of B cell “training” during a severe infection can mean the difference between life and death. Faster antibody responses are needed. To bridge that gap, the immune system has an alternative form of B cell activation – called extrafollicular activation – that generates fast-acting antibodies that seem to bypass many of the known safety checks that accompany a more precise response.
Extrafollicular responses develop quickly, are short-lived by design and die back when the more targeted responses emerge onto the scene.
Except when they don’t.
Autoimmune-like responses in Covid-19
Between 2015 and 2018, our lab found that these extrafollicular immune system responses were a common characteristic of people who suffered from autoimmune diseases, such as lupus. Patients suffering from this disease show chronically active extrafollicular responses that led to high levels of self-targeted antibodies and destruction of organs such as the lungs, heart and kidneys.
The presence of specific kinds of B cells generated by extrafollicular responses in the blood can be an important indicator of disease severity in lupus, and now also Covid-19.
In a recently published paper, my colleagues and I have identified extrafollicular B cell signatures in cases of severe Covid-19 similar to those we saw in active lupus. We showed that early on in the response to infection, patients with severe disease undergo a rapid activation of this fast-track pathway for antibody production. These patients produce high levels of viral-specific antibodies, some which are capable of neutralizing the virus. However, in addition to those protective antibodies, some that we saw look suspiciously like the ones found in autoimmune disorders such lupus.
In the end, patients with these autoimmune-like B cell responses fare poorly, with high incidences of systemic organ failure and death.
Tempering immune responses in Covid-19
Let me be clear here: Covid-19 is not an autoimmune disorder. The autoimmune-like inflammatory responses my team discovered could simply reflect a “normal” response to a viral infection already out of hand.
However, even if this kind of response is “normal,” it doesn’t mean that it’s not dangerous. These prolonged extrafollicular responses have been shown to contribute to autoimmune disease severity both through the production of self-targeted antibodies and through inflammation that can damage tissue like the lung and kidney. This suggests that these early immune responses to a viral infection like Covid-19 are in tension with the later-targeted antibody response; in other words, the body’s rapid antibody production to nab the virus runs the risk of targeting not the virus, but the patient’s own organs and tissues.
Immunologists like me need to learn more. Why are only some patients turning on such strong extrafollicular B cell responses? Are the antibodies that result from this response particularly prone to attacking and destroying the host’s organs? Would an ongoing autoreactive response help explain instances of “lingering” Covid-19 even after the viral infection has cleared?
Despite these uncertainties, the medical community needs to recognize that, in the appropriate patients, dampening immune responses through steroid treatment (or perhaps even more powerful autoimmune-focused therapies) is a critical weapon in combating Covid-19. Physicians and scientists must continue to build our arsenal of therapeutics around the idea that in some cases of Covid-19, controlling your response to the virus might be as important as controlling the virus itself.
Researchers were able to detect subtle ear movements in humans to focus on specific sounds
It’s likely that humans still possess a system that tries to control the movement of the outer part of the ear
The system, called pinna orienting, however, fell into disuse about 25 million years ago
Like many other animals, people can move their ears to focus on a specific sound, researchers say.
However, this movement of ears is subtle and the ability to do it hasn’t been known until now.
By measuring electrical signals in ear muscles as volunteers tried to detect sounds, researchers found that people make tiny, unconscious movements to aim their ears at a particular sound.
“The electrical activity of the ear muscles indicates the direction in which the subject is focusing their auditory attention,” said study leader Daniel Strauss, neuroscientist at Saarland University in Germany. “It is very likely that humans still possess a rudimentary orientation system that tries to control the movement of the pinna (the visible outer part of the ear).”
Subtle ear movements
Even though this system, called pinna orienting, fell into disuse about 25 million years ago, Strauss said it exists as a “neural fossil” within the human brain.
It’s not clear why pinna orienting was lost during human evolution, according to the authors of the study published online recently in the journal eLife.
For the study, researchers measured electrical signals of ear muscles and also made special high-definition video recordings of study volunteers. They were then able to detect the subtle ear movements by using computer-based motion magnification techniques.
Depending on the type of sound, they saw different upward ear movements and differences in the strength of rearward motion.
Reflecting user’s auditory intention
“Our results show that electromyography of the ear muscles offers a simple means of measuring auditory attention,” Strauss said, adding that the technique has the potential for other applications.
It could, he said, lead to hearing aids that would amplify sounds the wearer is trying to hear and suppress ones they are trying to ignore.
“The device would function in a way that reflects the user’s auditory intention,” Strauss said.
Such a hearing aid would quickly detect and interpret electrical activity in the ear muscles. A miniature processor would assess where the wearer is trying to aim their hearing and adjust the gain on the device’s directional microphones accordingly, he explained.
The company is looking for interns to be exposed In the following fields for a period of up to 24 months subject to the conditions of the internship agreement to be signed after appointment:
For latest Internships, Graduate programmes and Learnerships visit: graduates24.com
Fields of study:
Information Technology
Computer Science
Information Systems
Economics
Real Estate
Operations Management
Electrical Engineering (Heavy Current)
Building / Civil / Architecture / GIS Engineering
Chemistry
Microbiology
Biotechnology
Food Technology
Office Management and Technology
Office Administration
Business Administration
Accounting
Financial Accounting
Quality Management
Quality Assurance
Process Engineering
Software Development
Other Requirements:
Relevant studies have been completed
You must not have relevant experience
South African citizen (preference will be given to
You must not be studying full-time
You must be between the age 01 18-35 years
You must be unemployed with no Internship record
For latest Internships, Graduate programmes and Learnerships visit: graduates24.com
Cape Union Mart International (Pty) Ltd has been equipping South African adventurers since 1933, and is South Africa’s favourite outdoor adventure store. Stocking everything one needs for outdoor pursuits – including hiking, camping, trail running, mountain biking, snow sports, travel and more – Cape Union Mart is an essential first step in every adventure. Cape Union Mart has stores across South Africa, and in Namibia and Botswana.