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Institution

Adeyemi College of Education

About: Adeyemi College of Education is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Curriculum. The organization has 193 authors who have published 193 publications receiving 1252 citations. The organization is also known as: AFUED.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the batch removal of arsenic from aqueous solution using low-cost adsorbent (powdered eggshell) under the influences of initial arsenic ion concentrations (0.50 to 1.50 mg/L), pH (3.2 to 11.5) and particle size of eggshells (63 to 150μm) were investigated.
Abstract: The batch removal of arsenic from aqueous solution using low-cost adsorbent (powdered eggshell) under the influences of initial arsenic ion concentrations (0.50 to 1.50 mg/L), pH (3.2 to 11.5) and particle size of eggshells (63 to 150 μm) were investigated. Eggshells were collected from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, washed with distilled water, air dried, ground into powder and sieved into different sieve sizes using British standard sieve. Powdered eggshells were stored in a desiccator for use. Adsorption isotherms and dynamics of arsenic onto PES were studied. The study revealed that there was a slight reduction in the rate of adsorption of arsenic ion onto the larger particle size, but adsorption capacity and parameters were unaffected. Powdered eggshell with particle size of 63 μm removed up to 99.6% of the 1.5 mg/L of arsenic ion in synthetic water within the first 6 hours but decreased to 98.4% and 97.4% when the powdered eggshell particle sizes were increased to 75 and 150 μm respectively. The pH optimum for arsenic removal was 7.2. The adsorption isotherms and adsorption dynamic kinetic studied through the use of graphical method revealed that Freundlich, activated sludge adsorption and pseudo second-order kinetic models correlate significantly with the experimental data with correlation coefficient of not less than 0.964.

126 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The paper suggests that the adoption of a standardized healthcare terminology, education strategy, design of useable interfaces for ICT tools, privacy and security issues as well as the connection of legacy systems to the health network are ways of achieving complete interoperability of electronic based Health Information Systems in healthcare.
Abstract: Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) play significant roles in the improvement of patient care and the reduction of healthcare cost by facilitating the seamless exchange of vital information among healthcare providers. Thus, clinicians can have easy access to patients' information in a timely manner, medical errors are reduced, and health related records are easily integrated. However, as beneficial as data interoperability is to healthcare, at present, it is largely an unreached goal. This is chiefly because electronic Health Information Systems used within the healthcare organizations have been developed independently with diverse and heterogeneous ICT tools, methods, processes and procedures which result in a large number of heterogeneous and distributed proprietary models for representing and recording patients' information. Consequently, the seamless, effective and meaningful exchange of patients' information is yet to be achieved across healthcare systems. This paper therefore appraises the concepts of interoperability in the context of healthcare, its benefits and its attendant challenges. The paper suggests that the adoption of a standardized healthcare terminology, education strategy, design of useable interfaces for ICT tools, privacy and security issues as well as the connection of legacy systems to the health network are ways of achieving complete interoperability of electronic based Health Information Systems in healthcare.

98 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, periwinkle shell was used to prepare activated carbon by physicochemical activation with potassium hydroxide (KOH) and carbon dioxide (CO2) as the activating agents at 850°C for 2 h.
Abstract: Periwinkle shell, an abundant and inexpensive natural resource, was used to prepare activated carbon by physicochemical activation with potassium hydroxide (KOH) and carbon dioxide (CO2) as the activating agents at 850 °C for 2 h. The adsorption equilibrium and kinetics of methylene blue dye on such carbon were then examined at 25 °C. Adsorption isotherm of the methylene blue (MB) on the activated carbon was determined and correlated with common isotherm equations. The equilibrium data for methylene blue adsorption well fitted to the Langmuir equation, with maximum monolayer adsorption capacity of 500.00 mg/g. Two simplified kinetic models including pseudo-first-order and pseudo-second-order equation were selected to follow the adsorption processes. The adsorption of methylene blue on activated carbon derived from periwinkle shell could best be described by the pseudo-second-order equation. The kinetic parameters of this best-fit model were calculated and discussed.

96 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that the poor obstetric outcome of teenage pregnancy is related to non-utilisation of prenatal care rather than their biological age.
Abstract: We studied prospectively the effect of antenatal care on the obstetric performance of teenagers seen at a university teaching hospital over a 14-month period. When the obstetric complications among the teenagers were compared to their older counterpart, there were significantly higher complication rates, especially anaemia, preterm delivery, low birth weight and neonatal admission.After controlling for utilisation of antenatal care, significant differences were observed only in the incidence of low birth weight babies. In conclusion, this study has shown that the poor obstetric outcome of teenage pregnancy is related to non-utilisation of prenatal care rather than their biological age.

86 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20221
202121
202037
201921
201821
20175