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Get To Know: Tilak Weerasiri

#WeAreNorthern

Meet Tilak Weerasiri, Consultant Gynaecologist/Obstetrician, Northern Health.

Q: Firstly, whatโ€™s your coffee order?

My usual coffee order is a standard latte, Iโ€™m not very adventurous when it comes to coffee.

Q: Why and how did you choose your specialty?

I actually fell into obstetrics. My main aim after graduation was Country General Practice which included obstetrics and anaesthetics. I went to England to get some experience in both. I did a six-month rotation in obstetrics and enjoyed it so much I kept on and specialised in it.

Q: Can you tell us a bit about your career before starting at Northern?

While I was in England, I got my first specialist qualification in obstetrics and gynaecology and when I returned the first job I got was as a registrar at PANCH, where I was the precursor of The Northern Hospital.

I did a few more senior registrar years at The Royal Womenโ€™s Hospital, The Monash Medical Centre and The Mercy Hospital while getting my Australian exam and full specialist qualifications.

In my first year as a fully accredited specialist, I accepted a consultancy at The Mercy Hospital for Women and The Austin Hospital as well as The Preston and Northcote Community Hospital. I was the gynaecologist at the Austin for about 15 years before the Mercy moved to its current site and the job became redundant.

I was still at The Mercy Hospital and moved to The Northern Hospital when PANCH became TNH and moved across to Epping.

Q: What is your favourite memory since working here?

One incident that really stands out in my memory was a young woman who was transferred from another hospital with a ruptured uterus following childbirth. The patient was quite ill when she arrived but was quickly resuscitated and I did an emergency hysterectomy. There were about five or six anaesthetists working on her, and she did very well.

When I went to see her the next morning she was tucking into a plate of steak and chips. Thatโ€™s one thing about the Northern Health, in a dire emergency there is no shortage of expert assistance.

Q: How do you relax after a long shift?

I am a prolific reader, mostly novels and mainly cosy crime. I walk or swim for exercise and spend a fair bit of time with family. With four kids (now all adults) and five grandkids, there is never a dull moment.

Q: Where is a favourite place youโ€™ve travelled and why?

My favourite travel destination is actually my native land, Sri Lanka, a really lovely spot to visit with loft of natural beauty and very nice people. Well worth a visit.


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