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ඉන්දීය නළුවන් පරදන මහනුවර රෝහලේ වෛද්‍යවරයා lanka rahas video

An accident in 2010 physically crushed Dinesh Palipane, but his determination survived; and soon he will be only the second in Australia with quadriplegia to graduate as a doctor. In this email interview


I hope to walk again in the future!The conviction with which it is being said is convincing and from what this Sri Lankan-born young doctor has achieved, in the face of the cruel buffetings of life, seems an achievable ambition.For many others it is like an impossible dream but not to 32-year-old Dinesh Palipane, who will soon be only the second in Australia with quadriplegia to graduate as a medical doctor and the first with a spinal-cord injury. His life reveals a tale of courage against all odds and trust and confidence in himself and others.How not only relatively simple work requirements such as inserting a cannula he has had to labour over but also living life itself which most of us take for granted, come to the fore in an e-mail interview with Dinesh who will take the Hippocratic Oath in mid-December in Australia.Flashback to January 31, 2010 — not so long ago, just over six years back. Life was good and Dinesh was in the third-year of his medical studies at Griffith University on the Gold Coast. The future spread out ahead of him……..hopes and aspirations both in his personal and professional life.He had already achieved much. Born in Kandy, he had an eventful childhood, for his parents Chithrani and Sanath moved around a lot. Later his boyhood settled into a routine, he says, in the “beautiful little town” of Byron Bay in New South Wales, Australia.While the usual interests of boys held him, he played basketball and guitar and “was bit of a motorhead (a car and motorcycle enthusiast)”. Planes were a fascination and 14-year-old Dinesh took up flying lessons.His high school education was in Brisbane and as medical school was mostly graduate-entry (after completion of another degree) at the time, he secured a Degree in Law at Brisbane’s Queensland University of Technology, before sitting the medical entrance examination.“I didn’t grow up wanting to be a doctor,” says Dinesh, explaining that his passion for medicine grew while he was in law school. “During that time, I thought deeply about what was important to me. It might sound cliched but spending a lifetime helping people in a profession that is intellectually challenging was very attractive. ‘Wherever the art of Medicine is loved, there is also a love of Humanity,’ said Hippocrates. I think this gracefully sums up the essence of our profession.”It was a routine visit to his parents in Brisbane in January 2010 and the 26-year-old was driving home to the Gold Coast on the rainy night of the 31st. Suddenly his car aquaplaned (slid uncontrollably) on the Gateway Bridge, losing traction. After climbing an embankment, down it came, rolling nose-to-tail, then flipping the opposite way and rolling several more times.“The sound of crunching metal was sickening, but I told myself to think of it like a rollercoaster and enjoy the ride. Once the car finally landed, there was blood everywhere. The worst part though, was that I could not move,” says Dinesh, recalling the horrors of that night. His spine had been dislocated at the neck.Passing motorist Chris Bailey pulled over, held up Dinesh’s head and called an ambulance. Dinesh eventually spent seven months at the Princess Alexandra Hospital in Brisbane.This tryst with fate, destiny, misfortune or whatever one may call it, would change his life forever. “I cannot say this was an easy journey. I woke up in a hospital, paralyzed from the chest down. I could not move my fingers. I could not feel anything. I stared at the ceiling so many times, thinking about how to move forward,” he saysLittle actions were huge, frustrating challenges. Dinesh could not lift his arm without it falling back on him. He could not breathe well or speak full sentences. He lost consciousness most times when sitting up. With time, however, these physical things improved significantly. With a little feeling on the outside of his forearms, he can feed himself and move around in a wheelchair without help now.“There were great personal challenges too,” he says, with the emotion tangible even now. “Most of my close relatives fell away over the months. Our financial resources became depleted too.”Many people, however, also stood strongly and steadfastly by him throughout his difficult and traumatic journey back to health. His mother has been a “positive force”, tirelessly spending every single day helping him, since the accident. “We are a great team and I give her a lot of credit. She has given up a lot. Over the course of time, we lost family, friends and financial security. I am happy to say though that today, we have achieved a great deal,” says Dinesh.Back to the land of his birth came Dinesh to recuperate for four years, with immense support from “good friends” Sarva Amarasekare, Dilith Jayaweera, Varuni Amunugama and Mano Nanayakkara who helped him “get back on my feet”.Throughout, the dream of becoming a doctor persisted amidst the sorrow and the tragedy and it was Prof. Harry McConnell of his home medical school at Griffith University who supported him. Some close friends from high school and medical school have also been there for him since day one.There have also been the ‘lows’ and he recalls a meeting with several Deans of Medical Faculties in Sri Lanka who suggested that finishing medical school would be an “impossible” idea. “The only person who was supportive of me continuing a medical career was Prof. Nilanthi de Silva, Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, Kelaniya University,” says Dinesh without rancour towards the others.“We need to be more aware of what a diverse population of doctors can achieve,” he says,
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