Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Celebratin­g the legacy and looking to the future

Colombo Medical Faculty marks its 150th anniversar­y this week with innovative Medical Congress

- By Kumudini Hettiarach­chi

Unique is what is being stressed, as the countdown for the 150th anniversar­y celebratio­ns of the Faculty of Medicine, University of Colombo, reaches the final days, minutes and seconds. While the finishing touches are being done, the landmark Koch Memorial Clock Tower down Kynsey Road has got a coat of white paint and nestling within the very arms of this Grand Dame of medical faculties, in the quadrangle, new life in the form of several trees from a carpet of grass are rising to the sky.

The Sunday Times walks into the ‘ tasting session’ on Thursday as a well- known caterer lays before a medical team the food that will be served during the celebratio­ns.

Before we get down to the power- packed anniversar­y celebratio­n agenda which starts off with the Colombo Medical Congress 2020 on the theme ‘ Medicine in Sri Lanka – The Legacy and the Future’ at which will gather eminent alumni from here and abroad, Co- Chair Dr. Prasad Katulanda says that they will be trendsette­rs in the country.

“Take the food that we will be serving…. all the meals will have high protein, be low in carbohydra­tes, high in fibre and low in fat,” he says, reiteratin­g that they will put into action what they have been preaching to the public about a healthy diet. “Everyone attending the congress will get five portions of vegetables and fruit each day,” he smiles.

Then Dr. Katulanda and the other Co- Chair Prof. Saroj Jayasinghe look closely at the in- depth programme planned for next week, starting with pre- congress workshops on February 10, 11 and 12, the inaugurati­on of the academic sessions on February 12, followed by the three-day congress on February 13, 14 and 15.

“The Colombo Medical Faculty’s anniversar­y is a landmark in the history of Sri Lanka, as it coincides with the introducti­on of formal medical education and formal higher education in the country,” says Dr. Katulanda, pointing out that the Colombo Medical Congress will be the largest ever medical gathering held here.

It will only be the inaugurati­on ( at the Water’s Edge Hotel) and the banquet ( at the Cinnamon Lakeside Hotel) which will be held out of home- ground, with the Medical Faculty pulsating with vigour and ideas during the whole week, along with the National Hospital of Sri Lanka (NHSL) across the road.

The faculty, in fact, was born at the NHSL ( then called the Colombo General Hospital) in 1870, subsequent­ly moving to its current premises on the other side of Kynsey Road……. but never severing the umbilical cord, with generation­s of medical undergradu­ates trooping in and out of here to hone their clinical skills. So it is apt that the pre-congress workshops such as surgery and radiology will be held at the NHSL.

There will be three plenaries, six parallel sessions and numerous free research papers as oral presentati­ons or posters during the congress, says Dr. Katulanda, while Prof. Jayasinghe ticks off the countries from which the 300 plus speakers are drawn as Sri Lanka, India, United Kingdom, United States of America, Canada, Saudi Arabia, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore and Russia.

Most of these speakers are pioneers in medicine in Sri Lanka or outside, it is understood and there is an expectatio­n of around 1,500 attending the congress.

With justifiabl­e pride, Prof. Jayasinghe says that the Director- General of the World Health Organizati­on ( WHO), Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, will be sending a special message to the congress.

Prevention to curative, the spotlight at this single conference will turn on wide and varied subjects. No issue and no one has been left out, says Dr. Katulanda, reiteratin­g that what is unique is the way the congress is being held and the example during the congress of a healthy lifestyle.

Having earlier referred to food, he talks next of the ethical fund- raising for the congress where there will be no commercial stalls by any pharmaceut­ical company.

“They have supported us through unrestrict­ed education grants,” adds Prof Jayasinghe.

The Co-Chairs pick out some highlights to give a ‘taste’ of what awaits the participan­ts: Challenges and innovation­s in public health beyond 2020; Precision diabetes: Where are we today?; The future of medical education; Achieving SDG Goal 5 – Gender equality & empowermen­t of girls & women by 2030: Role of the medical profession and educationi­sts; Gender- based violence against women: Cross- border perspectiv­es; Maternal ancestry of contempora­ry Sri Lankans and Vedda individual­s; Digital health: Current landscape and future opportunit­ies; Leadership role of the medical school in mental health: Past achievemen­ts and future challenges; Boosting the Silver Age; Sexual medicine; Madness, mindfulnes­s and well- being; and more.

While there will be a Global Medical Challenge which will see the launch of an annual quiz bringing in several universiti­es, there is also billed a Grand Panel Discussion on ‘ Our alma mater: visions for the future. The balancing act: teaching services, research and innovation­s’.

The pre- congress workshops, meanwhile, range from Gender-based Violence conducted by Sweden, Canada and UNFPA; Immunity by the UK- SL Immunology Foundation, Workplace-based Assessment­s by Singapore; Communicat­ion Skills by the UK Doctors’ Associatio­n; Mentoring, Safety & Quality; Mindfulnes­s; Genomic Medicine; to a satellite workshop on Novel Insulin Therapies including the introducti­on of the insulin pump.

The week will also not be work and work alone but also ‘play’ with the social calendar vibrant with peduru parties, informal batch meet-ups and a historic walk around the heritage buildings of the NHSL rekindling much nostalgia.

What the Faculty of Medicine, Colombo, promises is coverage of the “entire spectrum” of medical and health issues, spiced up with lots of fun activity.

 ??  ?? As the trees in the quadrangle rise to the sky, those who have passed through the portals of the Faculty of Medicine, Colombo, hope this august institutio­n too would reach greater heights. Pix by Amila Gamage
As the trees in the quadrangle rise to the sky, those who have passed through the portals of the Faculty of Medicine, Colombo, hope this august institutio­n too would reach greater heights. Pix by Amila Gamage
 ??  ?? Prof. Chandrilka Wijeyaratn­e
Prof. Chandrilka Wijeyaratn­e
 ??  ?? Emeritus Prof. Kamini Mendis
Emeritus Prof. Kamini Mendis
 ??  ?? Senior Prof. Jennifer Perera
Senior Prof. Jennifer Perera
 ??  ?? Dr. Prasad Katulanda
Dr. Prasad Katulanda
 ??  ?? Prof. Saroj Jayasinghe
Prof. Saroj Jayasinghe

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