Ray avery biography book

Ray Avery (scientist)

New Zealand scientist

Sir Raymond John AveryGNZM (born )[1] is a New Zealand pharmaceutical scientist, inventor, author and social entrepreneur.

Personal life

Avery was born in Kent, England.[2] After spending his childhood in orphanages and foster homes, he has said he developed an interest in science at the age of 14 while sleeping rough in London and finding warmth in public libraries.[3][4] He now mentors young people, speaking regularly at schools and universities.[5] He was later educated at Wye College, a tertiary agricultural college in Kent.[6]

He settled in New Zealand in and became a New Zealand citizen within nine months.[7] In , Avery published his autobiography Rebel with a Cause, which charted his life from childhood in English orphanages and foster homes to knighthood.[2][6]

Avery announced in August that he was moving to Australia, citing societal reasons, including high rates of bullying, domestic violence, gang violence, and obesity, the high cost of living, institutional racism in healthcare and education, a "broken" hospital system, and opposition to a proposed fund-raising concert for his Lifepod device at Eden Park.[8]

Career

After graduating, Avery worked as an analyst in laboratories, in which he eventually took a shareholding.[6] After leaving Britain and settling in New Zealand, he was a founding member of the Department of Clinical Pharmacology at the University of Auckland School of Medicine.[citation needed] He was then the technical director of Douglas Pharmaceuticals, where he developed and commercialised pharmaceutical and nutritional products.[9]

In the s, as Technical Director of the Fred Hollows Foundation, Avery designed and commissioned two intraocular lens manufacturing facilities in Asmara, Eritrea and Kathmandu, Nepal.

Avery worked with other members of the team to develop replacement equipment when it became apparent that the manufacturing equipment originally commissioned by the foundation was not suitable.[10]

In , Avery founded an organisation focussed on international development, Medicine Mondiale, which he described as dedicated to making quality healthcare and equipment accessible to even the poorest developing nations around the world.[11] It was registered as a charity in New Zealand in and is also known as the Sir Ray Avery Foundation.[12]

In , Avery received a World Class New Zealand Award in the Life Sciences category.[13]

Avery is a co–founder of Jupl NZ Ltd, a medical technology company.[14]

Projects

Acuset IV flow controller

The Acuset is a small device designed to control the flow of drugs through an intravenous (IV) drip.

It was designed to simplify administering drips and to be used in developing countries without adequate medical care.[9] In the Acuset was a finalist in the Saatchi & Saatchi World Changing Ideas Awards.[15]

In December it was reported by Newsroom that clinical trials at Auckland City Hospital in showed that the Acuset was not more accurate than an existing device called a "roller clamp" which was already used widely in developing countries.[16] The findings were subsequently published in a medical journal in Avery's position, set out in the article, was that the trials "did not reflect normal usage" of the Acuset and used an earlier version of the product.[16]

Avery subsequently made a complaint to the New Zealand Media Council against Newsroom for reporting on the study and on allegations that he had sought the retraction of the study's findings.

The complaint was not upheld by the council, which concluded that the Newsroom article "contained no inaccuracy in relation to its key message of a threat to suppress publication of the results of tests relating to a device used to control intravenous drips, and indeed the complaint is not directed against that key message".[17] The Council noted that it was "made clear in the article that the test was on an earlier device, not the device currently marketed, and Sir Ray Avery's version of what has happened is set out in the article".

The council was also clear that in its decision it was not commenting on the merits of the earlier version of the Acuset, the current Acuset or the research studies that had been carried out.[17]

Lifepod incubator

The Lifepod was a proposed incubator that was in development by Medicine Mondiale with the goal of being low-cost, warm, sterile and robust, and suitable for distributing in poorer countries.[10] As of July , NZ$ million had been spent in development including NZ$2 million raised from public donations.[10] Avery apologised in for not being clearer to donors about the progress of the work.[18] In November the Department of Internal Affairs conducted a review after a complaint was made, and concluded it was satisfied that donations were being used properly, although it urged the foundation to consider "updating the public regarding the status of the LifePod incubators and managing their expectations as to when they will be most likely to be ready for delivery to Fiji".[19][20]

In March it was reported that the Lifepod would begin hospital trials in India in July, but this did not eventuate.[19] In , on announcing that he was leaving New Zealand and moving to Australia, Avery said opposition to a planned concert in at Eden Park to raise funds for the Lifepod was a "pivotal moment" leading to his decision to leave.

Aside from a few prototypes, no fully-functioning Lifepods were ever built.[8]

Infant and child nutrition products

Avery's agency Medicine Mondiale developed the infant formula "Proteinforte" for the treatment of protein-energy malnutrition.[21] The agency also developed a nutritional bar called the "Amigo Bar", based on amino acids, which were intended to be distributed in New Zealand schools to supplement children's diets through a for-profit social enterprise business.[22][23][24] Like the Lifepod, these never went into production either.[citation needed]

Books

Avery has published two books: the best-selling Autobiography Rebel with a Cause[25] charting his life from street kid to Knighthood and The Power of Us[26] celebrating New Zealanders who dare to dream.

Honours

Avery has received awards including:

References

  1. ^"Ray Avery". Radio New Zealand.

    Ray avery air conditioning: From an orphanage in England to celebrated inventor, scientist and New Zealander of the year – Sir Ray Avery’s life is a quintessential rags-to-riches story. Born in Kent, England, Avery grew up without parents.

  2. ^ ab"Lessons from mean streets of London". The New Zealand Herald. 17 June Retrieved 25 October
  3. ^ abNew Zealander of the Year AwardsArchived 23 February at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^"Who is Sir Ray Avery?".

    Newsroom. 25 July Retrieved 1 April

  5. ^Inspiring Kiwis: Ray Avery. Television New Zealand.
  6. ^ abc"One Kiwi's determination to make a difference".

  7. Ray avery net worth
  8. What did ray avery invent
  9. Ray Avery (photographer) - Wikipedia
  10. Ray Avery: Changing the World | Hope Channel Australia
  11. Scoop. 29 July

  12. ^"Great end to glorious Christmas". The New Zealand Herald. 31 December Retrieved 25 October
  13. ^ ab"Sir Ray Avery moving to Australia, citing gang violence and child poverty". Stuff. 26 August Retrieved 12 January
  14. ^ abCollins, Simon (1 December ).

    "NZ man aids millions with 15c water drip invention". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 25 October

  15. ^ abcGibson, Eloise (25 July ). "Can Ray Avery turn promises into reality?". Newsroom. Retrieved 1 April
  16. ^"About Medicine Mondiale".

    Medicine Mondiale.

  17. ^"Charity Summary".

    Ray avery biography Sir Raymond John Avery GNZM (born ) [1] is a New Zealand pharmaceutical scientist, inventor, author and social entrepreneur.

    The Charities Register. Te Tari Taiwhenua Internal Affairs. Retrieved 1 April

  18. ^World Class New Zealand WinnersArchived 27 February at the Wayback Machine. Kea New Zealand.
  19. ^"Expertise, leadership and experience". Jupl.

  20. Ray avery air conditioning
  21. Ray avery biography wife
  22. Ray avery biography book
  23. Retrieved 10 December [permanent dead link&#;]

  24. ^"World Changing Ideas award finalists announced". Saatchi & Saatchi. 22 January Retrieved 25 October
  25. ^ abGibson, Eloise (6 September ).

    "Legal threat to suppress clinical study". Newsroom. Retrieved 1 April

  26. ^ abMurphy, Tim (27 December ). "Media Council backs Newsroom over Ray Avery threat". Newsroom. Retrieved 1 April
  27. ^"Sir Ray Avery's self-imposed deadline to have LifePod baby incubator ready expires".

    TVNZ. 13 March Retrieved 1 April

  28. ^ abJohnston, Martin (22 March ). "Sick or premature babies in India to be first to use Sir Ray Avery's LifePod incubators". NZ Herald. Retrieved 1 April
  29. ^Gibson, Eloise (10 June ). "Inside Internal Affairs' Ray Avery inquiry".

    Newsroom.

    Ray avery biography wikipedia From an orphanage in England to celebrated inventor, scientist and New Zealander of the year – Sir Ray Avery’s life is a quintessential rags-to-riches story. Born in Kent, England, Avery grew up without parents.

    Retrieved 1 April

  30. ^"NZ food partnership to combat global malnutrition". Massey University. 21 February Retrieved 1 April
  31. ^"Amino Natural Launches $1 Million Equity Crowdfunding Campaign". Scoop Independent News. Amino Natural. 19 November Retrieved 1 April
  32. ^Murphy, Tim; Russell, Alexis (1 August ).

    "Another delay for Sir Ray".

    Ray avery biography death

    Sir Raymond John Avery GNZM (born ) [1] is a New Zealand pharmaceutical scientist, inventor, author and social entrepreneur.

    Newsroom. Retrieved 1 April

  33. ^"Amigo Nutrition Campaign". Amigo Nutrition. Sir Ray Avery Foundation. Retrieved 1 April
  34. ^"Rebel with a Cause" Penguin Books
  35. ^"The Power of Us Beattie's Book Blog
  36. ^Sir Ray AveryArchived 5 August at the Wayback Machine.

    Sir Peter Blake Trust.

  37. ^Jones, Nicholas (20 June ).

    Ray avery photographer Sir Ray Avery GNZM is a successful Scientist, author, entrepreneur, and philanthropist. Ray is an internationally recognised charismatic and entertaining public speaker who challenges everyone to “Dream Big”.

    "Can you trust 'NZ's most trusted' list?". NZ Herald. Retrieved 1 April

  38. ^"New Year honours list ". Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. 31 December Retrieved 5 January

External links