Parvez Haris (Bengali: পারভেজ হারিস) is a professor of biomedical science at the School of Allied Health Sciences in De Montfort University, United Kingdom.[4][5][6] He is an Editor-in-Chief of Biomedical Spectroscopy and Imaging.[7] He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and Public Health as well.[8] He is going to deliver speech for the International Biotech Symposium 2021 in Bangladesh.[9] Bengali scientists Parvez Haris has been selected in the top 1 percent or 100 thousand scientists list of the University of Stanford in the United States.[10] He is a member of International Scientific Committee of Nutrition and Food Engineering. He received the UK Bangladesh Catalysts of Commerce and Industry Awards (UKBCCI) on the category of business innovation in 2019.[11][12][13][14][15]
Parvez Haris | |
---|---|
Born | Parvez Iqbal Haris 1964 (age 59–60) |
Nationality | British |
Alma mater | University of London (UK) |
Known for | work on arsenic[3] |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Biomedical Science |
Institutions | De Montfort University (UK)[1][2] |
Professor Haris was born in Moulvibazar District of Sylhet Division in Bangladesh in 1964.[16] He came to Britain at the age of 10 in 1975 when his father owned a restaurant in Cardiff.[10]
In 1989, Parvez obtained his PhD in Biochemistry from the Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine, University of London,[8] under the supervision of Professor Dennis Chapman FRS. Succeeding his post doctoral fellowship, he started his career as a lecturer in Biochemistry at De Montfort University, Leicester in 1996. He has conducted a significant number of research on Arsenic contamination of water,[17][18][19] and its effects on the food chain.[20][21] In 2011, on a conference at Rize Üniversitesi, Haris presented how the toxic elements in the soil through foods effect on human health.[22] Besides, he is continuing research on other biochemistry subjects including coronavirus,[23][24] Human Health, Nutrition, Environmental Pollution etc.[25][26][27] He is well known for his contribution of reducing arsenic from rice.[28][29][3] A group of scientists led by him found a link between arsenic and rice consumption among a small number of British Bangladeshis.[30] Research team conducted by him discovered that rice grown in Sylhet has much lower arsenic concentration than similar types of rice from other regions of Bangladesh. Even the scientists found that some varieties of Sylheti aromatic rice had lower arsenic than the well-known Basmati aromatic rice from India and Pakistan.[31]
Some of Haris notable publications:[32][33]