Riz Tupai-Firestone
Ridvan Tupai-Firestone (known as Riz) is a Samoan–New Zealand academic, and is from January 2025 is a full professor in the Centre for Public Health Research at Massey University. Tupai-Firestone works on social and cultural health inequalities. Early life and educationTupai-Firestone was born in Samoa, and moved to New Zealand with her family in 1976.[1] She has links to the villages of Falealupu on Savai’i island and Matautu on Falealili.[1] Tupai-Firestone completed a Bachelor of Speech and Language Therapy at the University of Canterbury and then a PhD titled Obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome among taxi drivers: consequences and barriers to accessing health services at the Massey University.[2][1] Academic careerTupai-Firestone joined the faculty of Massey University, rising to associate professor in 2021 and full professor in 2025.[3][1] She first worked in sleep science at the Moe Tika Moe Pai SleepWake Research Centre before focusing on public health.[1] She is interested in social-cultural and health inequalities, community interventions for obesity and other diet-related health problems, and works with young Pacific people with non-communicable diseases.[4][5] In 2020 she was awarded a Marsden grant to lead a team from five institutions to investigate associations between culture, food systems, diet and traditional practices, and diet-related diseases.[6] Tupai-Firestone was the Pacific Strategy Leader for the A Better Start National Science Challenge, and was also part of the Healthier Lives challenge.[7][8] She was appointed Chair of the Lottery Health Research Committee in 2020.[9] She was also on the jury of the 2024 Falling Walls Lab.[4] AwardsIn 2014 Tupai-Firestone was awarded the New Zealand Health Research Council’s Sir Thomas Davis Te Patu Kite Rangi Ariki Health Research Fellowship.[10] Selected works
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