David Dewhurst Medal
Appearance
The David Dewhurst award is a bronze medal bestowed by Engineers Australia and is the most distinguished accolade within their biomedical engineering discipline.[1] It is named in honour of David John Dewhurst (1919 - 1996), an outstanding Australian biophysicist and biomedical engineer who performed pioneering work in the area of the cochlear implant.[2] The award was inaugurated in 1994 as the Eminent Biomedical Engineers Award and its first winner was David Dewhurst. Following his death in 1996 the award’s name was changed to the David Dewhurst Award as a permanent memorial.[3]
Recipients
[edit]- 1996 Keith Daniel,[4] Nucleus Ltd.
- 1997 Peter C. Farrell,[5] ResMed
- 1998 George Kossoff, CSIRO
- 1999 Richard Kirsner, La Trobe University
- 2000 Klaus Schindhelm, University of NSW
- 2001 Alex Watson, Premier Biomedical Engineering Pty Ltd
- 2002 Barry Seeger
- 2003 Laurie Knuckey
- 2004 Mark Pearcy
- 2005 John Southwell
- 2006 John Symonds
- 2007 Geoffrey Wickham,[6] Telectronics
- 2009 Andrew Downing,[7] Flinders University
- 2010 Alexander McLean
- 2011 Graham Grant
- 2012 David Burton,[8] Compumedics
- 2013 Nigel Lovell,[9] University of NSW
- 2014 James F. Patrick,[10] University of Melbourne
- 2015 Derek Abbott,[11] University of Adelaide
- 2016 Karen Reynolds,[12] Flinders University
- 2017 Walter John Russell, University of Adelaide
- 2018 Christopher Bertram,[13] University of Sydney
- 2019 Alan Finkel,[14] Office of the Chief Scientist (Australia)
- 2020 Michael Griffiths
- 2021 Leo Barnes,[15] TUV SUD GmbH
- 2023 Ed Skull
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "David Dewhurst Presentation". Engineers Australia.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "David John Dewhurst". Encyclopedia of Australian Science.
- ^ "David Dewhurst Award" (PDF). Engineers Australia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-03-10. Retrieved 2019-03-09.
- ^ "Organisation". LabShare. Archived from the original on 2019-03-03. Retrieved 2019-03-09.
- ^ "Success to dream about: ResMed's Peter Farrell". Ant Hill Enterperises.
- ^ "David Dewhurst Award Presented" (PDF). BME. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-03-10. Retrieved 2019-03-09.
- ^ "Emeritus Professor Andrew Downing". Flinders University.
- ^ "David Burton" (PDF). Compumedics.
- ^ "Scientia Professor Nigel Lovell has won the David Dewhurst Award". University of NSW.
- ^ "Citation for James F. Patrick" (PDF). University of Melbourne.
- ^ "Editorialleadership". IEEE.
- ^ "Nation's top biomedical engineering award for Flinders researcher". Flinders University.
- ^ "Chris Bertram wins David Dewhurst Award". Royal Society of NSW.
- ^ "A biomedical honour: David Dewhurst Award". Australian Government.
- ^ "How Leo Barnes got into biomedical engineering". Engineers Australia.