Viness Pillay Explained

Honorific Suffix:FAAS
Honorific Prefix:Professor
Viness Pillay
Death Date:24 July 2020
Citizenship: South Africa
Occupation:Pharmacist
Birth Date:1970
Alma Mater:University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
Children:1
Awards:National Research Foundation (NRF)

Viness Pillay FAAS (1970–2020) was a South African professor of pharmacy at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg.[1] [2] He was the Director of the Wits Advanced Drug Delivery Platform (WADDP), a member of African Academy of Sciences, Academy of Translational Medicine Professionals (ATMP) and a beneficiary of the 2013 Olusegun Obasanjo Innovative Award for developing the RapiDiss Wafer Technology as an innovative way to provide effective anti-retroviral (ARV) drug therapy to children afflicted with HIV/AIDS.[3] [4] [5] [6] [7]

Education

He obtained his master's degree in pharmacy from the University of Durban-Westville (South Africa) in 1996 and bagged his PhD at Temple University in 2000 as a Fulbright Scholar.

Scientific contributions

He developed RapiDiss Wafer Technology as an innovative way to provide effective anti-retroviral (ARV) drug therapy to children afflicted with HIV/AIDS. He developed the world's fastest dissolving matrix for the onset of rapid drug action in the human body, a neural device for therapeutic intervention in spinal cord injury and novel wound healing technologies. He also came up with his own molecular modelling paradigms called PEiGOR Theory - Pillay's Electro-influenced Geometrical Organization-Reorganization. This theory was published in the International Journal of Pharmaceutics.

Fellowship and membership

He was elected a Fellow of the Academy of Science of South Africa in 2012. He was also a member of the American Chemical Society, the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists, the New York Academy of Sciences, the Academy of Pharmaceutical Sciences of South Africa, and The Biomaterials Network.

Awards and honours

He was a beneficiary of National Research Foundation (NRF) Awards.[8]

Death

Pillay died on 24 July 2020 after a lengthy illness. He left behind a wife and a daughter.

Notes and References

  1. Yahya . Choonara . 2020-12-01 . Professor Viness Pillay (1970–2020) : obituary . SA Pharmaceutical Journal . 87 . 5 . 48–49 . 10520/ejc-mp_sapj-v87-n5-a16.
  2. Web site: African Academy of Sciences loses a Fellow The AAS . 2022-11-19 . www.aasciences.africa.
  3. Web site: Professor Viness Pillay wins the Olusegun Obasanjo Prize – ACGT . 2022-11-19 . acgt.co.za.
  4. Bawa . Priya . Pradeep . Priyamvada . Kumar . Pradeep . Choonara . Yahya E. . Modi . Girish . Pillay . Viness . 2016-12-01 . Multi-target therapeutics for neuropsychiatric and neurodegenerative disorders . Drug Discovery Today . en . 21 . 12 . 1886–1914 . 10.1016/j.drudis.2016.08.001 . 27506871 . 1359-6446.
  5. Web site: Nigeria: Pillay Is Winner of Obasanjo Prize for Innovation .
  6. Web site: Pillay Viness The AAS . 2022-11-19 . www.aasciences.africa.
  7. Web site: Viness Pillay The AAS . 2022-11-19 . www.aasciences.africa.
  8. Web site: Rapoo . Tsholanang . 2019-09-28 . Witsies recognised for scientific research and community impact . 2022-11-19 . Wits Vuvuzela . en-US.