Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

From Bristol to A’ pura on a life-saving mission

Sri-Lankan born Dr. Duleeka Knipe who recently received an award from the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Suicide Prevention for her research into suicide prevention in low-and middle-income countries, explains her work

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

Steadfastl­y and silently, a crusader against selfharm has been working at grassroots level in remote areas of Anuradhapu­ra as well as at her research bench in Bristol to provide evidence-based facts and figures to bring about effective preventive interventi­ons not just in Sri Lanka but across the world.

This year has been extraordin­ary for Sri-Lankan born Dr. Duleeka Knipe, fondly called Dee, who is based at the University of Bristol Medical School in the United Kingdom (UK).

Not only has she been presented the prestigiou­s De Leo Fund Award of the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Suicide Prevention (IASP) just last month (on September 17), she is also the proud mother of a baby boy born earlier this year.

Dr. Knipe who is Elizabeth Blackwell Institute Vice Chancellor’s Fellow in Bristol’s Centre for Academic Mental Health received the award in recognitio­n of her “outstandin­g research into suicide prevention in low-and middle-income countries”.

Now at home in Bristol on maternity leave with her eightmonth-old son, Danuka, and away from the rural hinterland of Sri Lanka for awhile, she recaps her life for the Sunday Times in an e-mail interview. However, we have met her on several occasions over the years at suicide prevention meetings in Sri Lanka.

Yes, Dr. Knipe was born in Sri Lanka in the early 1980s, completing the family of Upali and Dharshani Perera who already had a son.

Living at Polhengoda, her parents were “not wealthy but were very hardworkin­g” and it was when Duleeka was not even two years old that the family emigrated to Hong Kong.

“Thinking back now, it’s amazing that my parents who were in their 20s moved to a country where they had no connection­s, with two young children. Not only did they move but they took the brave step of starting an import and export business by themselves. Despite it being hugely successful, it all came crashing down just before the millennium,” says Dr. Knipe reminiscin­g how her parents then took another brave step in moving them all to the UK, starting again from scratch.

Life took its usual course and she secured her first degree in Pathology and Microbiolo­gy from the University of Bristol, following it up with a Public Health Master’s at Cardiff University and a Doctorate in Social Medicine/ Population Health back at her original University of Bristol.

After her first degree, though she had always had an interest in science, she was “put off a bit”.

“I didn’t want to spend my time looking down microscope­s. I liked working with people and wanted to do something more peoplefocu­sed so I left science behind,” says Dr. Knipe, adding that it was “by chance” that she stumbled into the field of public health. It came when she was working as an administra­tor and then researcher on an epidemiolo­gical Parkinson’s disease project.

British Epidemiolo­gist, Prof. Yoav Ben-Shlomo, a project lead had encouraged her to pursue her Master’s in Public Health. It was hard for her – studying full-time on a self-funded basis and working part-time as a research assistant……it paid off though, with her first publicatio­n. “I was first author, which was a real bonus for my CV.”

Marriage to Paul Knipe, “no, not a researcher”, followed at the end of the project and being bitten by wanderlust, the couple decided to travel.

“By chance I had the opportunit­y to check out a project happening in the Anuradhapu­ra district.

My parents taught me basic Sinhala which was very useful. I didn’t know until this time that Sri Lanka even had a problem with suicide. I was only meant to volunteer on this project for a couple of months but this turned into 18 months!” says Dr. Knipe.

Wanting to get experience abroad, the introducti­on had come from Prof. Ben-Shlomo to his fellow Bristol Epidemiolo­gist Prof. David Gunnell who put her in touch with an Edinburgh researcher working on a project in Sri Lanka.

It was the time (in 2011) when Sri Lanka’s suicide rate was still quite high and the project in Anuradhapu­ra was focusing on finding out whether giving lockable boxes to farming communitie­s would lead to a reduction in pesticide-related self-poisoning.

“Massive,” was the project and included around 54,000 households in six divisional secretaria­ts, with Dr. Knipe’s study office based in Tambuttega­ma.

“I commuted by bus everyday from Anuradhapu­ra. It was hard work. We worked evenings and weekends – I was managing the data collection done by a team of about 20-25 who had completed their Advanced Level examinatio­n,” she says.

The stories shocked and moved Dr. Knipe. “I felt a connection to the people we were interviewi­ng. The complexity of suicidal behaviour in this context surprised me. I knew about suicide and self-harm in the UK. What I knew was that the behaviour is often linked to mental illness, but in Sri Lanka that associatio­n didn’t seem as clear.”

She was well and truly “gripped” by this life-threatenin­g situation the humble folk of Sri Lanka faced and launched into this work with much support from her husband who even lived in Anuradhapu­ra with her for 18 months in the early stages.

So she does have to travel a lot and spend extended periods of time away from home but tries to limit the amount of time she spends away, but if it is necessary, “then I make sure that I take that time back when I get home and spend more time with my family”, she says, detailing how she balances her work-family life.

 ??  ?? A community workshop with Dr. Duleeka Knipe in the Tambuttega­ma Divisional Secretaria­t area
A community workshop with Dr. Duleeka Knipe in the Tambuttega­ma Divisional Secretaria­t area

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