Siri Kannangara

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Born(1944-10-28)28 October 1944
Bandaragama, Ceylon
Died7 June 2024(2024-06-07) (aged 79)
Sydney, Australia[1]
OccupationsSports medical doctor, trainer, sports medicine specialist and rheumatologist
KnownforSpecialised in sports medicine
Siri Kannangara
Born(1944-10-28)28 October 1944
Bandaragama, Ceylon
Died7 June 2024(2024-06-07) (aged 79)
Sydney, Australia[1]
OccupationsSports medical doctor, trainer, sports medicine specialist and rheumatologist
Known forSpecialised in sports medicine

Siri Kannangara (28 October 1944 – 7 June 2024) was a Sri Lankan-born Australian sports medical doctor, trainer, sports medicine specialist and rheumatologist.[2] He was known for assisting the Sri Lankan diaspora community living in Australia for over four decades with his medical expertise.[3]

Kannangara hailed from a village in Bandaragama.[4] He initially pursued his studies at Bandaragama Rambukkara Vidyartha Vidyalaya.[5]

He pursued his primary and secondary education at Royal College in Colombo. He excelled in numerous sports, including table tennis, basketball, and field hockey, when he was studying at Royal College. He entered medical college in 1964 and continued to be engaged in multiple sporting activities, including table tennis, basketball, and field hockey, at the University of Ceylon.[1] He also went onto take the leadership role during his academic career by captaining the Combined Universities team for both field hockey and table tennis during a mercantile invitational tournament which was held in India. He successfully completed his MBBS at the University of Colombo in 1970.[1] Immediately after he became qualified as a doctor in 1971, he received a lucrative employment opportunity in New Zealand at a teaching hospital at Christchurch.[4]

He met an All Blacks rugby union player who also served as a physician at Guy's Hospital in London. The player then invited Kannangara for a job offer to take up the role of senior registrar.[4] He also received a scholarship to New Zealand where he completed further medical training in sports medicine.[4]

Career

Later life

References

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