Sri Lanka Army Medical Corps

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Sri Lanka Army Medical Corps
, SLMC

The Sri Lanka Army Medical Corps (SLAMC) (

medical services to all army personnel and their families in war and in peace. It is made up of 4 regular units and one volunteer unit. Headquartered in Colombo, formally at army headquarters. The corps Cap badge depicting the Rod of Asclepius. General officers and senior officers of the SLMC wear gorget patches of maroon rather than of scarlet worn by other officers of similar rank.[1]

History

Ceylon Medical Corps war grave, Newington Cemetery, Edinburgh

The origins of the corps dates back to 29 July 1881 when a

Army Training Centre, Diyatalawa. The first Regiment, CAMC was formed in 1965 and the CVMC became the 2nd (Volunteer) Regiment, CAMC with its personal serving during the 1971 JVP insurrection. The corps was renamed once again in 1972 as the Sri Lanka Army Medical Corps when Sri Lanka became a republic. With the onset of the Sri Lankan Civil War military base hospitals were established at the Palaly Military Base and at the Panagoda Cantonment in 1985. The Directorate of Army Medical Service was established in 1985. In 1997, a military base hospital was established in Anuradhapura. With civil war intensifying in the 1980s and 1990s the SLMC was expanded and deployed support combat operations and the high number of casualties.[2]

Hospitals

Since all three armed forces and the police maintain their medical services with their own hospitals, the corp is only responsible for maintaining and operating army medical facilities mainly focused on treatment of battle casualties. Apart from medical reception stations in almost all military stations these include;

Military Hospitals
Base Hospitals in

Units

Regular Army

  • 1st Regiment, Sri Lanka Army Medical Corps (Regimental HQ SLAMC, Werahera)
  • 3rd Regiment, Sri Lanka Army Medical Corps (Anuradhapura)
  • 4th Regiment, Sri Lanka Army Medical Corps (Jaffna)
  • 5th Regiment, Sri Lanka Army Medical Corps (Habarana)

Volunteers

Training Centres

  • Sri Lanka Army Military School Of Nursing

Notable members

Order of precedence

Preceded by Order of Precedence Succeeded by

See also

References

  1. ^ "Dress Regulation PDF - Part I" (PDF). army.lk. Sri Lanka Army. Retrieved 20 May 2021.
  2. ^ "Silent saviours". Sunday Times. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
  3. ^ Major General C. Thurairaja was a sporting superstar Archived 2011-06-29 at the Wayback Machine

External links and sources