The Star Malaysia

M’sian scientist does nation proud

Local researcher from UM to receive prestigiou­s world award in physics

- Thestartv.com

KUALA LUMPUR: A Malaysian researcher has become the first scientist from a developing country to receive the Marie Sklodowska­Curie Award.

“I was speechless. I never expected to be selected because previous recipients were all very establishe­d scientists,” said Prof Dr Ng Kwan Hoong of the prestigiou­s award that was named after Marie Curie, the only person to win a Nobel Prize in two different sciences (physics in 1903 and chemistry in 1911.)

The award honours scientists who have contribute­d to the education and training of medical physicists, students and health personnel, and the advancemen­t of the profession.

It is given out by the UK-based Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Medical Physics (IOMP), which represents 25,000 medical physicists worldwide.

Prof Ng, who is from Universiti Malaya’s Faculty of Medicine, said in an interview: “It is such a humbling experience for me to be men- tioned in the same breath as those I look up to.”

For this grandfathe­r-of-two, his core research is in breast cancer screening.

He is determined to improve early detection and is working with fellow researcher­s in Singapore to use artificial intelligen­ce in computer-aided diagnosis.

Prof Ng will be presented with the award during the World Congress on Medical Physics and Biomedical Engineerin­g in Prague in June.

Past recipients include Prof John Cameron, who invented the bone mineral densitomet­er for detection of osteoporos­is, and Prof Charles Mistretta, who developed the digital subtractio­n angiograph­y used in interventi­onal radiology to clearly visualise blood vessels.

Prof Ng, who was named IOMP’s top 50 medical physicists in 2013, said the recognitio­n was “extra special” because it showed that scientists from developing nations could also contribute to humanity.

“This internatio­nal recognitio­n means a lot to me because the field of medical physics is still very new here.”

The Academy of Sciences Malaysia Fellow was one of the first non-physicians to be admitted into the Academy of Medicine Malaysia.

Among his proudest achievemen­ts was setting up the UM medical physics master programme two decades ago.

It is the only post-graduate medical physics academic programme outside the United Kingdom and Ireland that’s accredited by the UK Institute of Physics and Engineerin­g in Medicine.

In 2014, he set up the Asean College of Medical Physics.

“I’m in my 60s now.

“When I started teaching, I was among the pioneers of radiation medicine,” said Prof Ng, who was among the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency consultant­s who worked on the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster report.

He is also the founding president and president emeritus of the South-East Asian Federation of Organisati­ons of Medical Physicists, and co-founder and past-president of theAsia-OceaniaFed­eration ofOrganisa­tions of Medical Physicists.

 ??  ?? Humbling experience: Dr Ng said it’s wonderful for him to be mentioned in the same breath as those he looks up to. By CHRISTINA CHIN sgchris@thestar.com.my
Humbling experience: Dr Ng said it’s wonderful for him to be mentioned in the same breath as those he looks up to. By CHRISTINA CHIN sgchris@thestar.com.my

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