Landmark 'Dunedin Study' founder Dr Phil Silva dies, aged 84
Photo:
Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study
The founder of a landmark study following more than a thousand babies born in the early 1970s has died.
Dr Phil Silva, who started the Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study - commonly known as the 'Dunedin Study' - died on Thursday, aged 84.
He began the study, which followed the lives of 1037 babies born at Queen Mary Maternity Hospital, Dunedin, in 1972.
Current Dunedin Study director Professor Moana Theodore.
Photo:
Supplied
Current Dunedin Study director Professor Moana Theodore said he was "an interesting academic", who previously worked as a former primary school teacher and psychologist.
Teaching rural children in the 1960s underpinned his life's work, she added.
"He always had a passion for teaching, and helping support children and their families."
A masters degree and doctorate in research focused on children began under Otago University lecturer Dr Patricia Buckfield in the late 1960s, Theodore said.
Buckfield had an interest in neonatology and gathered data on every baby born at Dunedin's Queen Mary obstetric hospital between 1967-73. This lead to the creation of the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Unit, under Silva's direction.
Theodore said Silva was an energetic mentor, who "took people along with him", and this bolstered the study's success, despite the odds of little funding.
"In the very early days, that meant he was able to bring on board hundreds of volunteers, who would help the study.
"He was incredibly driven, he had this huge energy and he faced almost impossible odds to set up the Dunedin Study in those early days, but he didn't let a lack of resource deter him.
"Through this ability to create relationships and to bring people on board with this greater purpose of improving other people's lives, he was able to get hundreds of volunteers to collect data and that has been something that's made the Dunedin Study really special."
The study's 90 percent participation rate - more than 50 years later - was "unparalleled in the world", she said.
"A lot of that is to do with it's really a community study - it's proudly the Dunedin Study, it's not just the Dunedin Study - and that began with Phil."
Silva mentored both the previous director - the late Professor Richie Poulton, who ran the study after Phil retired, beginning in 1999 or 2000 - as well as Theodore, she said.
"He hired me originally as an interviewer at the age-26 assessment phase, when the study members were 26, back in 1998, and he always kept actively involved in supporting and providing advice to me as well.
"He was so passionate about improving the lives of others and, starting in early life, he once argued publicly that New Zealanders, as a whole, could be seen to care more about their cars than they did about their children. They would check cars every six months to a year.
"His research and his vision for improving lives resulted in things like more routine check-ups for children, particularly in pre-school, and this growing understanding of health in those early years, such as the high rates of glue ear, and the need to show compassion to our children and young people, particularly if they were seen to be going off the rails."
The study made the cover of
Time
magazine in 1993 - a year before he was awarded an OBE for services to health and education.
"The headline read, 'All you need is love'. That summed up how Phil really felt about children and young people."
Silva left behind "an incredible legacy" said Theodore. "We continue to work to uphold [that] and we're seeing study members now at age 52, through this lifetime of service.
"Dr Phil has left this legacy and a taonga [prize] for New Zealand, which leaves behind the best childhood foundation guarder in the world - and the most studied group of people anywhere in the world."
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
5 hours ago
- RNZ News
Disability groups fear vital travel subsidy could be capped
Fears are growing in the disability community that a vital travel subsidy scheme could be capped. The Total Mobility Scheme that is co-funded by the government helps disabled people who cant use buses trains or ferries get where they need to go in subsidised taxis. The scheme has been under review for the past two years, with no official word on any changes. Disability groups fear the subsidy will be cut or overall funding capped, seriously restricting options for people who use the scheme. Auckland academic Dr Sally Britnell spoke to Lisa Owen. To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.

RNZ News
5 hours ago
- RNZ News
Public health expert calls for mandatory health star ratings
business food 4:08 pm today A public health expert is calling for the health star ratings on packaged food to be compulsory, but said it needs to be a more rigorous scheme. It's a voluntary system and the most recent figures show an uptake of less than 40%. The government previously said it will look at making the star ratings mandatory if a 70% target is not achieved by November. Nutritionist and co-chair of Health Coalition Aotearoa, Doctor Sally Mackay spoke to Lisa Owen.

RNZ News
8 hours ago
- RNZ News
Food Snob and Mon Ami French cheeses recalled over listeria fears
Two of the Food Snob and Mon Ami products being recalled. Photo: Supplied / MPI A number of cheeses from brands Food Snob and Mon Ami are being recalled due to concerns of a potentially life threatening bacteria. Listeria is a foodborne bacterium which causes the illness listeriosis. The cheeses being recalled are all French Brie or Camembert. Consumers are being advised the affected products should not be eaten. They can be returned to their place of purchase for a refund or to throw them out. The products, which were made in France, are being removed from shelves at retail outlets and supermarkets throughout New Zealand, and have not been re-exported. "Listeriosis infection can be serious among vulnerable groups, such as pregnant people and their unborn babies, newborns, the elderly, and those with weakened immune systems," said New Zealand Food Safety deputy director-general Vincent Arbuckle. "It is particularly dangerous during pregnancy because it can cause miscarriage, premature labour or stillbirth, and infection in the new-born baby," Arbuckle said. In older and immuno-compromised people, listeriosis can also lead to meningitis, blood poisoning, and death. However in healthy adults infection is unlikely to be severe, at most causing mild diarrhoea and flu-like symptoms. Anyone who has consumed one of the recalled products and is concerned about their health should contact their doctor or call Healthline. The products being recalled are: All batches and all dates with a best before date up to and including 22 September 2025 are affected by the recall. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.