Taiwo Olayemi Elufioye
Quick Facts
Biography
Taiwo Olayemi Elufioye is a Nigerian pharmacologist and researcher. Elufioye works as a professor at the University of Ibadan in the department of pharmacognosy.
Elufioye was born into an educated family where her mother was a teacher and her father was an administrator at a university. Her entire family, including her siblings have attended college.
Elufioye was awarded a research grant by the MacArthur Foundation in order to conduct research on several Nigerian medicinal plants in order to test for compounds that may be used to counteract neurodegenerative diseases.
In 2014, Elufioye was one of five women who won the Elsevier Foundation Awards for Early Career Women Scientists in the Developing World. Elufioye won the award for her work on the pharmacological properties of Nigerian plants. Her research is especially focused on compounds that could be used to treat malaria, wounds, memory loss, leprosy and cancer. The Elsevier Foundation Awards include a prize of $5,000 and an all-expense paid trip to Chicago to receive the award. When she won the award, the Vice Chancellor at the University of Ibadan, Isaac Adewole, said that Elufioye's accomplishments "would inspire other women in science" and that she is "a pride of Nigeria and the African continent as a whole."
Elufioye is published in the African Journal of Biomedical Research, Pharmacognosy Research, the International Journal of Pharmacy, and the African Journal of Traditional, Complementary and Alternative Medicines.