Professor Levente Diosady (ChemE) has been named an Officer of the Order of Canada, and Dr. Arthur Slutsky (EngSci 7T0, MASc MIE 7T2) has been named a Member of the Order of Canada.
Diosady was honoured “for his contributions to the science of food engineering, which has improved the lives of millions of people around the world.” He is widely recognized for his work on micronutrients — vitamins and minerals that are needed in small but regular amounts to ensure proper development and good health. His best-known achievement is the creation of a nutrient-enriched seasoning known as double-fortified salt (DFS).
In much of the world, salt is already fortified with iodine to prevent thyroid gland disorders. Diosady and his team worked for 15 years with Nutrition International (formerly known as the Micronutrient Initiative) to find a way to include iron as well as iodine. Iron deficiencies cause conditions such as anemia that affect more than two billion people worldwide.
Adding iron to iodized salt was a challenge: in early attempts, the two elements reacted with each other, converting the iodine into a form that simply evaporated away. After many years of study, the team developed a method of microencapsulation, coating iron particles with a barrier of vegetable fat to form grains that look and feel identical to salt.
The resulting DFS is now produced in the Indian State of Tamil Nadu and is being added to school lunches provided to more than five million children in the state, through a program supported by the Canadian International Development Agency. Last year, the program was expanded to the state of Uttar Pradesh. Diosady and his team continue to research microencapsulation technologies for other micronutrients, such as vitamin A, B12 and zinc.
Diosady is a Fellow of the Chemical Institute of Canada, the Canadian Institute of Food Science and Technology, the Canadian Academy of Engineering, the International Academy of Food Science and Technology and the Royal Society of Canada. He has received the Ontario Professional Engineers Research and Development Medal, the W.J. Eva Award from the Canadian Institute of Food Science and Technology, the K.Y. Lo Medal from the Engineering Institute of Canada and the Engineers Canada Gold Medal Award, the organization’s highest honour. He is also a recipient of the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal, the Order of Ontario, and the Officer’s Cross of the Hungarian Order of Merit, Hungary’s highest civilian honour.
Dr. Arthur Slutsky was honoured “for his contributions to the research of mechanical ventilation injury and its prevention through non-conventional respiratory mechanics.”
In addition to having authored or co-authored more than 450 peer-reviewed research articles, Slutsky served for 18 years as the first full-time vice-president of research at St. Michael’s Hospital. During that time, he oversaw the creation of The Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute/Keenan Research Centre, which opened its doors in 2011. The new building brought together researchers who had previously been spread across 10 different locations. Slutsky also increased the size and scope of research at St. Michaels, more than tripling its annual number of publications and growing its research budget by a factor of 18.
Slutsky is a Fellow of the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences and of the Royal Society of Canada, and is an Honorary Member of the European Society of Intensive Care Medicine. He was named the 2014 Researcher of the Year by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and has received both the Critical Care Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Thoracic Society and the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal.
“These two extraordinary members of our community exemplify the tremendous contributions our faculty and alumni continue to make, both to Canada and on a global scale,” said Dean Cristina Amon. “On behalf of the Faculty, I offer my heartfelt congratulations on this highly prestigious and richly deserved recognition.”