Skip to main content

Site navigation

  • University of Technology Sydney home
  • Home

    Home
  • For students

  • For industry

  • Research

Explore

  • Courses
  • Events
  • News
  • Stories
  • People

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt
  • Study at UTS

    • arrow_right_alt Find a course
    • arrow_right_alt Course areas
    • arrow_right_alt Undergraduate students
    • arrow_right_alt Postgraduate students
    • arrow_right_alt Research Masters and PhD
    • arrow_right_alt Online study and short courses
  • Student information

    • arrow_right_alt Current students
    • arrow_right_alt New UTS students
    • arrow_right_alt Graduates (Alumni)
    • arrow_right_alt High school students
    • arrow_right_alt Indigenous students
    • arrow_right_alt International students
  • Admissions

    • arrow_right_alt How to apply
    • arrow_right_alt Entry pathways
    • arrow_right_alt Eligibility
arrow_right_altVisit our hub for students

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt

POPULAR LINKS

  • Apply for a coursearrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt
  • Scholarshipsarrow_right_alt
  • Featured industries

    • arrow_right_alt Agriculture and food
    • arrow_right_alt Defence and space
    • arrow_right_alt Energy and transport
    • arrow_right_alt Government and policy
    • arrow_right_alt Health and medical
    • arrow_right_alt Corporate training
  • Explore

    • arrow_right_alt Tech Central
    • arrow_right_alt Case studies
    • arrow_right_alt Research
arrow_right_altVisit our hub for industry

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt

POPULAR LINKS

  • Find a UTS expertarrow_right_alt
  • Partner with usarrow_right_alt
  • Explore

    • arrow_right_alt Explore our research
    • arrow_right_alt Research centres and institutes
    • arrow_right_alt Graduate research
    • arrow_right_alt Research partnerships
arrow_right_altVisit our hub for research

For you

  • Libraryarrow_right_alt
  • Staffarrow_right_alt
  • Alumniarrow_right_alt
  • Current studentsarrow_right_alt

POPULAR LINKS

  • Find a UTS expertarrow_right_alt
  • Research centres and institutesarrow_right_alt
  • University of Technology Sydney home
Explore the University of Technology Sydney
Category Filters:
University of Technology Sydney home University of Technology Sydney home
  1. home
  2. arrow_forward_ios ... For students
  3. arrow_forward_ios ... Current students
  4. arrow_forward_ios ... Managing your course
  5. arrow_forward_ios ... Graduation
  6. arrow_forward_ios ... Speakers and speeches
  7. arrow_forward_ios 2018
  8. arrow_forward_ios Dr Tony Smithyman

Dr Tony Smithyman

explore
  • Speakers and speeches
    • 2009 and older
      • arrow_forward Associate Professor Jeremy Edmiston
      • arrow_forward Bill Edge
      • arrow_forward Diane Jones
      • arrow_forward Dr Dawn Casey
      • arrow_forward Dr Lynn Gribble
      • arrow_forward Dr Rebecca Huntley
      • arrow_forward Emeritus Professor J Robin Warren
      • arrow_forward Emeritus Professor Judith M Parker
      • arrow_forward Glen Boreham
      • arrow_forward The Hon. Bruce Baird
      • arrow_forward John Brogden
      • arrow_forward Marco Belgiorno-Zegna, AM
      • arrow_forward Mark Scott
      • arrow_forward Michael Kirby
      • arrow_forward Michael Myers
      • arrow_forward Penelope Seidler, AM
      • arrow_forward Professor David S G Goodman
      • arrow_forward Stephen Loosley
      • arrow_forward Steve Vamos
      • arrow_forward Tim Besley
    • arrow_forward 2010
    • arrow_forward 2011
    • 2012
      • arrow_forward Mr Guy Templeton
      • arrow_forward Mr Thomas Keneally, AO
    • 2013
      • arrow_forward Dr Cathy Foley
      • arrow_forward Dr Chris Roberts
      • arrow_forward Dr Jeffrey Crass
      • arrow_forward Dr Kerry O'Brien
      • arrow_forward Dr Michael Myers, OAM
      • arrow_forward Hon. Helen Sham-Ho OAM
      • arrow_forward The Hon James Spigelman, AC, QC
      • arrow_forward The Hon Patricia Forsythe
      • arrow_forward Mr Brett Clegg
      • arrow_forward Mr Chris Johnson, AM
      • arrow_forward Mr Clary Castrission
      • arrow_forward Mr David Beslich
      • arrow_forward Mr Geoff Lloyd
      • arrow_forward Mr Geoff Wilson
      • arrow_forward Mr Mark Willson
      • arrow_forward Mr Peter Bradd
      • arrow_forward Mr Richard Alcock
      • arrow_forward Mr Thomas Michael Keneally, AO
      • arrow_forward Mrs Annalie Killian
      • arrow_forward Ms Amy Wilkins
      • arrow_forward Ms Hannah Tribe
      • arrow_forward Ms Lila Mularczyk
      • arrow_forward Ms Maile Carnegie
      • arrow_forward Ms Maria Atkinson, AM
      • arrow_forward Ms Maureen Thurston
      • arrow_forward Prof Rosalind Croucher
      • arrow_forward Prof S.P Kothari
      • arrow_forward Professor Brian David Outram Anderson AO, Order of the Rising Sun, Japan
      • arrow_forward Professor David Currow
      • arrow_forward Professor Graeme Milbourne Clark, AC
      • arrow_forward Rev Timothy Costello
      • arrow_forward Senator Sekai Masikana Holland
    • 2014
      • arrow_forward Dr Alex Byrne
      • arrow_forward Dr Anna Clark
      • arrow_forward Dr Chau Chak Wing
      • arrow_forward Dr Lisa O’Brien
      • arrow_forward Dr Richard Sharp
      • arrow_forward Dr William James Peacock
      • arrow_forward The Honourable John Watkins
      • arrow_forward Mr Chris Gabriel
      • arrow_forward Mr Ian Maxted
      • arrow_forward Mr Jack Curtis
      • arrow_forward Mr Mark Maloney
      • arrow_forward Mr Neil Chatfield
      • arrow_forward Mr Patrick McIntyre
      • arrow_forward Mr Peter Ivany AM
      • arrow_forward Mr Peter Longman
      • arrow_forward Mr Roland Slee
      • arrow_forward Mr Tony Sukkar
      • arrow_forward Mr William Cox
      • arrow_forward Mrs Alison Page
      • arrow_forward Ms Alexandra Rose
      • arrow_forward Ms Alison Peters
      • arrow_forward Ms Bernie Hobbs
      • arrow_forward Ms Camilla Block
      • arrow_forward Ms Catherine Livingstone AO
      • arrow_forward Ms Lily Serna
      • arrow_forward Ms Margaret Cunneen SC
      • arrow_forward Ms Rachel Healy
      • arrow_forward Ms Sam Mostyn
      • arrow_forward Ms Wendy Bryant
      • arrow_forward Professor Clifford Hughes AO
      • arrow_forward Professor Debra Jackson
      • arrow_forward Professor Jane Sandall
      • arrow_forward Professor Terry Campbell AM
    • 2015
      • arrow_forward Dr John Best
      • arrow_forward Dr Paul McGillick
      • arrow_forward Dr Rosemary Bryant AO
      • arrow_forward Dr Simon Walsh PSM
      • arrow_forward Dr Terrence Stevenson
      • arrow_forward Emeritus Professor Ross Milbourne AO
      • arrow_forward The Honourable Dame Quentin Bryce AD CVO
      • arrow_forward Miss Penny Winn
      • arrow_forward Mr Andrew Penfold AM
      • arrow_forward Mr Chris Zaharia
      • arrow_forward Mr Justin Greiner
      • arrow_forward Mr Martin Hill
      • arrow_forward Mr Paul Freeman
      • arrow_forward Mr Richard Tamba
      • arrow_forward Mr Richard White
      • arrow_forward Mr Stephen Page
      • arrow_forward Mr Tony Frencham
      • arrow_forward Ms Elizabeth Ann Macgregor OBE
      • arrow_forward Ms Elizabeth Foley
      • arrow_forward Ms Elizabeth Koff
      • arrow_forward Ms Jacqueline Feeney
      • arrow_forward Ms Katherine Burleigh
      • arrow_forward Ms Leona McGrath
      • arrow_forward Ms Pauline Vamos
      • arrow_forward Ms Rose Hiscock
      • arrow_forward Ms Rosemary Blight
      • arrow_forward Professor The Honourable Dame Marie Bashir AD CVO
      • arrow_forward Professor Sam Bucolo
      • arrow_forward Professor Shankar Sankaran
      • arrow_forward Professor Vlado Perkovic
    • 2016
      • arrow_forward Adrian Turner
      • arrow_forward Alicia Maynard
      • arrow_forward Andrew Mead
      • arrow_forward Anntonette Dailey
      • arrow_forward Anthony Burke
      • arrow_forward Bettina McMahon
      • arrow_forward Bruce Ferguson
      • arrow_forward Carla Zampatti AC
      • arrow_forward Charles Rice
      • arrow_forward Chris Bulmer
      • arrow_forward Chris Drane
      • arrow_forward Craig Laslett
      • arrow_forward David Curran
      • arrow_forward Debra Thoms
      • arrow_forward Edwina McCann
      • arrow_forward Elizabeth Sullivan
      • arrow_forward Gene Sherman
      • arrow_forward Jane Needham
      • arrow_forward Jenny Edwards
      • arrow_forward John Goh
      • arrow_forward Kate Wilson
      • arrow_forward Kim Jacobs AM
      • arrow_forward Lacey Johnson
      • arrow_forward Laurence Coy
      • arrow_forward Louise McElvogue
      • arrow_forward Mark Fladrich
      • arrow_forward Meera Agar
      • arrow_forward Neil Balnaves
      • arrow_forward Peter Freedman
      • arrow_forward Peter Kazacos
      • arrow_forward Peter Steinberg
      • arrow_forward Sacha Coles
      • arrow_forward Sharon Cook
      • arrow_forward Stephanie Fahey
    • 2017
      • arrow_forward Bill Gladstone
      • arrow_forward Brian Wilson AO
      • arrow_forward Craig Lambert
      • arrow_forward Craig Roy
      • arrow_forward Damon Rees
      • arrow_forward Frances Hughes ONZM
      • arrow_forward Gene Sherman AM
      • arrow_forward George Koukis
      • arrow_forward Glen Boreham AM
      • arrow_forward Hilda Clune
      • arrow_forward Ian Oppermann
      • arrow_forward Ian Watt AC
      • arrow_forward Jacqui Cross
      • arrow_forward Jenny Brockie
      • arrow_forward Joanna Knott OAM
      • arrow_forward John McGuire
      • arrow_forward Katherine Woodthorpe
      • arrow_forward Kim Crestani
      • arrow_forward Lionel King
      • arrow_forward Luca Belgiorno-Nettis AM
      • arrow_forward Mark Scott AO
      • arrow_forward Matthew Favier
      • arrow_forward Michael Sexton SC
      • arrow_forward Narelle Kennedy AM
      • arrow_forward Peter Bailey
      • arrow_forward Peter Booth
      • arrow_forward Peter Bradd
      • arrow_forward Richard White
      • arrow_forward Rob Lynch
      • arrow_forward Sally Redman AO
      • arrow_forward Sean Gordon
      • arrow_forward Steve Vamos
      • arrow_forward Susannah Eliott
      • arrow_forward Tim Soutphommasane
      • arrow_forward Wendy Machin
      • arrow_forward William Smart
    • 2018
      • arrow_forward Adjunct Professor Kylie Ward
      • arrow_forward Adrian Appo OAM
      • arrow_forward Aidan Sarsfield
      • arrow_forward Ana Maria Escobar
      • arrow_forward Associate Professor Beth Kotze
      • arrow_forward Brian Zulaikha
      • arrow_forward Caro Meldrum-Hanna
      • arrow_forward Caroline Rockett
      • arrow_forward Catherine Breen Kamkong
      • arrow_forward Craig Roy
      • arrow_forward Cristina Cifuentes
      • arrow_forward Danny Lester
      • arrow_forward David Thodey AO
      • arrow_forward Dean McEvoy
      • arrow_forward Dianne Hill
      • arrow_forward Dr Alex Zelinsky AO
      • arrow_forward Dr Christobel Ferguson
      • arrow_forward Dr Edward Humphries
      • arrow_forward Dr Ray Owen
      • arrow_forward Dr Tony Smithyman
      • arrow_forward Emeritus Professor Vicki Sara AO
      • arrow_forward Frank Howarth PSM
      • arrow_forward Garry Browne AM
      • arrow_forward George Savvides
      • arrow_forward Hamish Cameron OAM
      • arrow_forward The Hon Justice Ann Ainslie-Wallace
      • arrow_forward Jennifer Westacott
      • arrow_forward Jon Hutchison AM
      • arrow_forward Julian Doyle
      • arrow_forward Kerrie Mather
      • arrow_forward Kim McKay A.O.
      • arrow_forward Laura Berry
      • arrow_forward Max York
      • arrow_forward Om Dhungel
      • arrow_forward Paul Thorley
      • arrow_forward Professor David Currow
      • arrow_forward Professor Peter Ralph
      • arrow_forward Professor Robert Gordon Whittaker AM FRSN FAIB
      • arrow_forward Rob Castaneda
      • arrow_forward Scott Olsen
      • arrow_forward Stan Grant
      • arrow_forward Zareh Nalbandian
    • 2019
      • arrow_forward Ajay Bhatia
      • arrow_forward Andrea Myles
      • arrow_forward Andrew Simpson
      • arrow_forward Associate Professor Eric Chow
      • arrow_forward Brad Chan
      • arrow_forward Brooke Boney
      • arrow_forward Claire Madden
      • arrow_forward Denise Lofts
      • arrow_forward Dr Andrew Mears
      • arrow_forward Dr Larry Marshall
      • arrow_forward Dr Paul Scully-Power AM
      • arrow_forward Dr Ponndara Ith
      • arrow_forward Dr Sarah Hill
      • arrow_forward Drenka Andjelic
      • arrow_forward Edward Santow
      • arrow_forward Elaine Henry OAM
      • arrow_forward Emeritus Professor John Daly
      • arrow_forward Hoang Dao
      • arrow_forward Joel Willey
      • arrow_forward John Quinn
      • arrow_forward Jost Stollmann
      • arrow_forward Kelly Ferguson
      • arrow_forward Kristal Kinsela-Christie
      • arrow_forward Kylie Walker
      • arrow_forward Laurie Cowled
      • arrow_forward Louise Vlatko
      • arrow_forward Lyn Lewis-Smith
      • arrow_forward Melonie Bayl-Smith
      • arrow_forward Mia Garlick
      • arrow_forward Peter Bailey
      • arrow_forward Professor Hugh Durrant-Whyte
      • arrow_forward Professor Jane Sandall CBE
      • arrow_forward Professor Sandy Middleton
      • arrow_forward Rachel Grimes
      • arrow_forward Richard Potok
      • arrow_forward Robert Kelly
      • arrow_forward Roland Slee
      • arrow_forward Sarah Gibson
      • arrow_forward Steven Worrall
      • arrow_forward Susan Bannigan
      • arrow_forward Tanya Hosch
      • arrow_forward Tim Reed
      • arrow_forward Todd Greenberg
      • arrow_forward Topaz Conway
      • arrow_forward Violet Roumeliotis
      • arrow_forward Warwick Plunkett AM

Founder and Managing Director, Cellabs Pty Ltd

Ceremony: 16 October 2018, 10:30am- Faculty of Science, Faculty of Health

Speech

Chancellor, Vice Chancellor, deans of the Faculty of Health and Faculty of Science, distinguished guests, members of staff and especially graduates, family and friends. Welcome. Thank you for this opportunity to deliver this occasional address. It’s a great honour for me and a great pleasure. If I stumble over a few words, I hope you’ll forgive me –

I’ve just arrived back from the tiny little country of Malawi. Now, Malawi, because you’re now graduates, you’re very smart, you know everything, is a small country in East Africa, which also happens to be my birthplace, To the new graduates, many, many congratulations. For each and every one of you, your award’s required countless hours of hard work and application, and unless someone’s actually been through the process, you never get to know just how hard it is and how difficult and exhausting it is to get there, so well done. But let’s not forget the families, either. Who knows what sacrifices the families have had to put up with to get their family members through, so a special thanks to you also. It’s time to celebrate and for you to look to your future.

What will you do with your degree? How can you apply your newfound knowledge in the best possible way, and what are the great challenges that are facing us today? How can you develop a successful career in today’s highly competitive environment? But if you boil all of that down, it just comes to one thing: will I be able to get a job in the future? That’s the question. I can’t answer those questions for you, but perhaps I can share a little bit of my experience of the past 40 years in science and offer some thoughts to the future.

To paraphrase that Australian writer, A B Facey, I’ve had a very fortunate scientific life. I’ve studied under, I’ve met, I’ve worked with some amazing scientists over the years. As a bacteriologist and immunologist, I had the opportunity to work with very difficult problems, including cancer, HIV-related diseases, tropical diseases like malaria, and more recently, I’ve been tackling the really difficult problem of antibiotic resistance. I’ve also had the privilege to travelling to more than 60 countries in all the continents except Antarctica – to remote parts of Africa, to Asia, to the Americas, to Europe and the former Soviet Union. All this in the name of science. Not even professional tennis players get to as many countries as I do.

I was particularly lucky that I graduated in the mid-1970s – now, that may seem a long time ago to you; it doesn’t to me – at the start of what is now called the biotechnology revolution. This revolution was based on two breakthroughs that happened very simultaneously – the discovery of recombinant DNA techniques and also the discovery of monoclonal antibodies. Those two breakthroughs combined to create this biotechnology revolution, and they laid the foundation for a massive new industry, which now employs hundreds of thousands of scientists and has produced hundreds of new drugs. In fact, more than half the new drugs now coming onto the medical market have come from the biotechnology industry.

One thing it did was it allowed lots of scientists like me to take advantage of this new technology revolution, this new industry, and it allowed me to set up my company, Cell Labs, in 1984, which is now Australia’s longest-running biotech company. The best piece of good fortune that I had has a scientist was when I decided what I was going to do with my new biotech company, because it actually consisted of me and a desk and as sympathetic assistant. And we didn’t know what we were going to do but we’d put up our shingle biotech company, and we thought about all the different things we could do but the one thing I kept coming back to was the tropical diseases at that time were very, very neglected.

Even here in Sydney, the School of Tropical Medicine had shut down. It was very unfashionable – deeply unfashionable – to be working in tropical diseases in the 1970s. But I’d been born in Africa and I’d seen the effect of the diseases and so I thought that’s where we would go. And so, we have spent the last 30 years working on diseases like dengue fever, malaria, schistosomiasis, leishmaniasis, elephantiasis. These diseases, you’ve got to understand, affect at least a third of the world’s population, so it’s been an endlessly fascinating and rewarding journey. I can honestly say that I have not been bored for one minute in all those years, so I chose the right subject.

What have I learned that could possibly be of relevance to you today? I mean, you may just be looking at me and saying, ‘I wish he would hurry up because we want to get to the party’ but it may be important to you. So, if we’ve made such wonderful progress, what other challenges are there today? You know, during my lifetime I’ve seen the cracking of the DNA code, I’ve seen sequencing, whole-genome sequencing, I’ve seen almost the total eradication of smallpox, the near-elimination of diseases like polio. When I was a boy growing up, I had friends who were in these iron lungs with polio, but people don’t even mention it nowadays because it’s vanished. And it was all due to this work that was coming out, this tremendous explosion of medical and scientific technology. All sorts of new vaccines were coming alone.

So, perhaps there’s no challenges for you – perhaps you’re wasting your time. I don’t know. However, let me tell you, nothing could be further from the truth. There has never been a time in history where we need scientists more than today. This is where I get you very, very depressed before you go out. In fact, we are really in deep trouble. Previous generations, especially mine, have left the planet in an incredible mess. We’ve denuded the forests, we’ve polluted the rivers, we’ve fished out the oceans, we’ve fouled the air and we’ve driven many species to the brink of extinction. Okay? And in addition to that, as part of that, along with this destruction has come a whole range of terrifying new diseases that we had never even contemplated before. We’ve got diseases such as Ebola virus, dengue fever, chicken [name], Zika virus, West Nile fever, we have a resurgence of malaria and in more recent years we’ve just managed to contain swine flu in 2015, bird flu 2013 and SARS in 2003. And in each case, these outbreaks and epidemics took almost the total resources of the world’s global biomedical community to contain them. And at the front line, what I call the thin white line, were the scientists, okay?

There’s a lot of other diseases emerging too – re-emerging – as a result of emigration, conflict, and other problems. Global travel. Leishmaniasis has resurged in the Syrian refugees. Chagas disease, which is a very, very dangerous disease of the heart, parasitic disease, has appeared in the southern United States, and a disease that has never been seen anywhere in Europe, [name], has appeared in Sardinia, in all places. And at the same time, all the drugs we’ve spent so much time developing – our antibiotics, our antiparasitic drugs – have all stopped working or they’re starting to be less and less effective.

Another typical example – chloroquine resistance in malaria. And a particular problem is this antibiotic resistance. Can you imagine working in a hospital where there are no antibiotics? Can you imagine a situation where we have an influenza epidemic like the one in 1918, the Spanish Flu, which killed 100 million people? Can you imagine having that happen again but without having antibiotics to treat the secondary infections? So, it’s not a question of too few challenges, but too many. And who’s going to sort out the mess? Well, it’s not going to be me, because I’m going to be retired. It’s going to be you. And so, I wish you the best of luck.

I’ll tell you who it won’t be – it will not be the merchant bankers, it will not be stockbrokers, and it won’t be the politicians. It’ll be you, the graduates of today, who’ll have to be on the front line. You’ll have to handle the bird flus and the Zika viruses and the Ebolas, and you’ll have to look after the patients with these things. So, we’ve never needed scientists as much as we need them now. So, anyway, are you all depressed now? Everyone depressed? Good.

So, is there any good news? Yes, there is some good news. There has never been a time in history, in the history of scientists, when scientists had so much knowledge at their fingertips. The DNA revolution has given us almost incredible access to the world of biology. I mean, for example, it took hundreds of millions of dollars – billions of dollars – to sequence the first human genome back in 2000, but now you can do that for a couple of hundred dollars in two or three hours. Incredible power. And if you don’t – if your interests don’t lie in infectious diseases, you’ve got the field of immunotherapy or genetic engineering with the new [name] techniques.

And at the same time as that’s going on, that genetic revolution, we have the information revolution, so suddenly you, the new graduates, you’ve got the whole world’s libraries in your pocket with your iPhone or your tablet. Every library is just there. Anyway, you must be thinking – and I’ll finish here – that’s all very well, these great challenges, all these great pandemics and epidemics are coming our way. But what can I do as an individual? You know, I’m working in a laboratory or a hospital – I can’t do much to help these problems. And I think that’s the wrong attitude altogether.

I think what you should do is aim high. Choose an area of science that you really love and aim high. It’s amazing what difference one person in some tiny laboratory can do. The history of science is littered with individuals who, by themselves, took on the prevailing view and revolutionised science. To give you a few examples: Galileo, who was thrown into prison because he said the sun didn’t revolve around the earth; it was the other way around. Spanish Inquisition took objection to that. Semmelweis, who discovered or prevented childbed fever – he ended up in a lunatic asylum. He was committed to a lunatic asylum because he went against the prevailing wisdom, but he saved and has continued to save millions and millions of women from childbed fever. And then Félix d'Hérelle, who discovered phages, another great individual. And then in Australia we have Professor Rob Warren and Professor Barry Marshall who won the Nobel Prize for going against prevailing thoughts about what causes stomach ulcers from h.pylori. All great individuals.

So, I’d just like to finish with one final bit of advice from Malawi again: one of my great heroes was a fellow called Dr Anthony Hall Martin, and he was one of the greatest conservators that Africa’s ever seen. He managed to save lots and lots of game parks and he’s managed to save countless species from extinction, especially the big animals, rhinos, elephants, lions etcetera. He died in 2014, and if you go to, there’s a small game park in the south of Malawi called Majete, and on a hill there there’s a little epitaph to this fellow, Anthony Hall Martin, and it’s a saying from a fellow called Daniel [name], and this is the epitaph in honour of Anthony Hall Martin. It says, ‘Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir one’s blood, and probably themselves will not be realised. Make big plans, deep into the future. Aim high in hope and work. Have faith, remembering that a noble plan, once recorded, will never die and long after we’re gone will still be a living thing.’ So, aim high, choose worthwhile targets, have a wonderful day, and have a wonderful career. Thank you.

 

About the Speaker

Dr Tony Smithyman

Dr Smithyman is the Managing Director and founder of Cellabs , a Sydney based diagnostics company which specialises in the design, development and manufacture of immunodiagnostic kits for tropical and infectious diseases.

Born in Malawi and educated in Scotland, he specialised in bacteriology and immunology before moving to Australia in 1982. Since establishing Cellabs, in 1985, it has developed into one of Australia's oldest and most respected private biotechnology companies, and has expanded its range of products to include over 20 diagnostic kits which are exported to over 50 countries worldwide.

From 1990, Dr Smithyman aided in the development and release of diagnostic tests for Giardia, Cryptosporidium and Chlamydia, and since then has focused on the tropical diseases such as malaria, leishmaniasis and elephantiasis.

In recent years, he has turned his attention to the rapidly escalating problem of antibiotic resistance, and in 2004 formed Special Phage Services (SPS).  In 2012, SPS merged with AmpliPhi Biosciences Corporation, a phage therapy company with operations in Europe, Australia and the USA.

Dr Smithyman is a member of the American Society for Microbiology Europe.

He graduated with a Bachelor of Science from the University of St Andrews, Scotland and Doctor of Philosophy, Bacteriology and Immunology from the University of Glasgow.

Acknowledgement of Country

UTS acknowledges the Gadigal People of the Eora Nation and the Boorooberongal People of the Dharug Nation upon whose ancestral lands our campuses now stand. We would also like to pay respect to the Elders both past and present, acknowledging them as the traditional custodians of knowledge for these lands. 

University of Technology Sydney

City Campus

15 Broadway, Ultimo, NSW 2007

Get in touch with UTS

Follow us

  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Facebook

A member of

  • Australian Technology Network
Use arrow keys to navigate within each column of links. Press Tab to move between columns.

Study

  • Find a course
  • Undergraduate
  • Postgraduate
  • How to apply
  • Scholarships and prizes
  • International students
  • Campus maps
  • Accommodation

Engage

  • Find an expert
  • Industry
  • News
  • Events
  • Experience UTS
  • Research
  • Stories
  • Alumni

About

  • Who we are
  • Faculties
  • Learning and teaching
  • Sustainability
  • Initiatives
  • Equity, diversity and inclusion
  • Campus and locations
  • Awards and rankings
  • UTS governance

Staff and students

  • Current students
  • Help and support
  • Library
  • Policies
  • StaffConnect
  • Working at UTS
  • UTS Handbook
  • Contact us
  • Copyright © 2025
  • ABN: 77 257 686 961
  • CRICOS provider number: 00099F
  • TEQSA provider number: PRV12060
  • TEQSA category: Australian University
  • Privacy
  • Copyright
  • Disclaimer
  • Accessibility