1. What is a business continuity plan, and why is it important? Why and how is it implemented? What is the key purposes of the plan?
2. Discuss your understanding of the business continuity plan sections which the textbook discussed, and include in your answer other sections that may be included in the plan that you found during personal research.
3. Discuss how the business continuity plan (when activated and used) can help an organization’s risk management program. Be specific.
4. In a brief discussion, connect the dots between a risk mitigation plan, a risk assessment and the business continuity plan. How do they relate to each other, or how do they work together in meeting risk management goals.
Please make sure you include sources you used for answering these questions.”
Information security and risk management
A business continuity plan (BCP) is a document that outlines how a business will continue operating during an unplanned disruption in service. Plans may provide detailed strategies on how business operations can be maintained for both short-term and long-term outages. It details steps to be taken before, during and after an event to maintain the financial viability of an organization. Business continuity plan is implemented using the following steps: identify the scope of the plan, identify key business areas, identify critical functions, identify dependencies between various business areas and functions, determine acceptable downtime for each critical function, and create a plan to maintain operations.
The delivery of therapeutic compound to the target site is a major trouble in the treatment of various diseases. A conventional application of drugs is characterized by limited effectiveness, poor biodistribution, and lack of selectivity [14]. The nanoparticles (NPs) as drug delivery systems may offer a number of advantages such as protection of drugs against degradation, targeting the drugs to specific sites of action, organ or tissues, and delivery of biological molecules such as proteins, peptides, and oligonucleotides.
Applications of drug nanoparticles include: both biodegradable nanoparticles for systemic drug delivery and nonbiodegradable nanoparticles for drug dissolution modification have been studied [15-18]. Proposed applications for drug nanoparticles vary from drug targeting and delivery [15, 17, 19-23] to even gene [24-26] and protein [27, 28] therapies. Administration of nanoparticles by, for example, parenteral [16] ocular [29-31] , transdermal [32], and oral routes have been studied. However, the oral route is still the most convenient, preferred, and in a lot of cases, also the most cost-effective route of drug administration [28, 33-37].
There is considerable interest in recent years in developing biodegradable nanoparticles as a drug/gene delivery system [25, 38-41]. An ideal drug-delivery system possesses two elements: the ability to target and to control the drug release. Targeting will ensure high efficiency of the drug and minimize the side effects, especially when dealing with drugs that are supposed to kill cancer cells but can also kill healthy cells when delivered to them. Controlled drug release can decrease or even prevent its side effects.
The advantages of using nanoparticles for drug delivery applications rise from their three main basic properties. First, nanoparticles, because of their small size, can penetrate through smaller capillaries, which could allow efficient drug accumulation at the target sites [42, 43]. Second, the use of biodegradable materials for nanoparticle preparation can allow sustained drug release within the target site over a period of days