Phagenesis Ltd
Yasmin Wan (ACCA) has a diverse work experience spanning from 2013 to 2022. Yasmin most recently worked as a Management Accountant at Phagenesis Ltd starting from May 2022. Prior to that, they held the position of Corporate Finance Executive at Hallidays from October 2019 to May 2022, where they provided M&A lead advisory and funding services. Prior to Hallidays, they worked at EM&I Group from November 2016 to October 2019 as an Assistant Management Accountant and previously as a Ledger Co-ordinator from October 2015 to December 2016. At EM&I Group, they were responsible for various accounting tasks such as maintaining purchase ledgers, processing invoices, reconciling statements, and handling payroll. Starting their career at Hyde Group from September 2013 to December 2014, Yasmin had a split role as an Accounts Assistant and Internal Auditor. Overall, Yasmin Wan has gained experience in finance, management accounting, corporate finance, and internal auditing throughout their career.
Yasmin Wan earned a Level 2 Foundation diploma in Accounting and Business in September 2011 from AAT. Yasmin further pursued their studies at Astley Sports College from 2007 to 2011, but no specific degree or field of study is mentioned. Later on, from 2012 to 2014, they attended Tameside College where they obtained an Association of Accounting Technicians (MAAT) degree in Accounting. In September 2013, Yasmin Wan also achieved a Level 4 Professional diploma in Accounting from AAT. Currently, they are enrolled at ACCA since 2017, though no specific degree or field of study is provided for this period.
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Phagenesis Ltd
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Phagenesis is developing a device for the treatment for dysphagia, the inability to swallow safely, that often accompanies stroke or other neuro-deficit diseases. The approach is to harness the brain's own capacity for relearning functions that have been lost through brain damage (via "neuroplasticity" or "corticalremapping"). Focusing initially on the care of stroke patients as they recover in hospital (acute care), Prof Shaheen Hamdy of the University of Manchester, UK, painstakingly devised a method of delivering electrical signals from the pharynx (throat) along nerve cells directly to the relevant parts of the brain. The results of his work have been published in top peer-reviewed scientific and medical journals, including The Lancet, the Nature group of publications, and Gastroenterology.