Sir Albert William LileyKCMG (12 March 1929 – 15 June 1983) was a New Zealand medical practitioner, renowned for developing techniques to improve the health of foetusesin utero.
In 1963, after three unsuccessful attempts, Liley successfully carried out the first ever successful intrauterine blood transfusion. The foetus had Rh disease/hemolytic disease and had been expected to die before birth. The highly publicised procedure was a milestone in not only medical treatment but also public perception. Initially the procedure had a success rate of only about 40%, but this rose over time.
Liley was one of the founders of the New Zealand anti-abortion group, the Society for the Protection of the Unborn Child (now Voice for Life), in 1971 and served as that organisation's first president. In 1977, Robert Sassone edited a series of interviews with Liley and Jérôme Lejeune, entitled The Tiniest Humans.[3]
Personal life
Liley met his future wife Helen Margaret Irwin Hunt (known as Margaret) as a classmate in medical school; they married in 1953. They had five biological children and an adopted child with Down syndrome.[4]
The family maintained a 200-acre (81 ha) block outside Benneydale in the King Country where Liley exercised a passion for silviculture.
Since 2004 the Health Research Council of New Zealand has annually awarded the Liley Medal in recognition of an outstanding contribution to medical research.[6]
2020: Professor Mark Weatherall, University of Otago, and Mark Holliday, Medical Research Institute of New Zealand
2021: Sarah Jefferies and her team at ESR, including Virginia Hope, for their research showing the effects of New Zealand's COVID-19 response, which was published in The Lancet.[13][14]
2022: Valery Feigin, Auckland University of Technology, "for the landmark Lancet Neurology paper that showed for the first time the global, regional, and national burden of stroke and its risk factors in all the world’s 204 countries".[15]
2022: Colin Simpson, Victoria University of Wellington, "for his role as a lead author of one of the first papers in the world to confirm the safety of COVID-19 vaccines."[16]
2023: Michael Baker and his team, "who published two companion papers in the Lancet that represent a breakthrough in our understanding of the causes of acute rheumatic fever and the role of group A streptococcal infections".[17]
^Robert Sassone (ed): The Tiniest Humans: Interviews with Sir William Alfred Liley and Professor Jérôme Lejeune: Stafford, Virginia 1977, American Life League. An online excerpt was released on 5 October 2005.
^Casper, Monica J. The Making of the Unborn Patient: A Social Anatomy of Fetal Surgery, Rutgers University Press, 1998, p. 66.
^"Medals | Health Research Council". hrc.govt.nz. 2012. Retrieved 17 February 2012. The Liley medal recognises an individual whose recent research has made an outstanding contribution to the health and medical sciences. The medal is named after Sir William (Bill) Liley KCMG, BMedSc, MB, ChB, PhD (ANU), Hon. DSc (VUW), Dip Obs, FRSNZ, FRCOG, Hon. FACOG, to recognise his lifetime contributions to health and medical sciences