Science
From Kuantan to ‘Oscars of science’: top Malaysian scientist is constantly adapting
Key Points
From Kuantan to ‘Oscars of science’: top Malaysian scientist is constantly adapting Breakthrough Prize winner Thein Swee Lay’s research has helped turn sickle cell disease and beta-thalassaemia into treatable conditions “I have not come across a Malaysian restaurant that sells good popiah. I miss it,” Thein told This Week in Asia in an exclusive interview where she fondly reminisced about her childhood in Malaysia’s coastal town of Kuantan. Thein, the seventh of nine children, said her large...
From Kuantan to ‘Oscars of science’: top Malaysian scientist is constantly adapting
Breakthrough Prize winner Thein Swee Lay’s research has helped turn sickle cell disease and beta-thalassaemia into treatable conditions
“I have not come across a Malaysian restaurant that sells good popiah. I miss it,” Thein told This Week in Asia in an exclusive interview where she fondly reminisced about her childhood in Malaysia’s coastal town of Kuantan.
Thein, the seventh of nine children, said her large family moved from town to town in then Malaya because of her father’s civil service postings.
The constant relocation taught her to adapt to ever-changing circumstances, said the 74-year-old, who works at the National Institutes of Health campus in Bethesda and has lived in Washington since 2015.
In April, she won one of the 2026 Breakthrough Prizes, dubbed the “Oscars of science”, for work that helped turn a decades-old mystery in blood disorders into a gene-editing discovery.