T. Sachithanandan


Sachithanandan Thambinathan, better known as T. Sachithanandan, was a Malaysian anaesthesiologist.

Background

Born in Kuala Lumpur to ethnic Malaysian Indian parents of Sri Lankan Tamil ancestry, he attended Victoria Institution and graduated from the University of Calcutta where he was the Founding President of the university's International Students Association. During his postgraduate specialist training in anaesthesia in the United Kingdom, Sachithanandan trained with post-war British anaesthesiologists that included John Alfred Lee, John Francis Nunn and Professor Thomas Cecil Gray. He was conferred the F.F.A.R.C.S.I. a Fellowship in Anaesthesia by the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland in addition to the D.A.
In 1964, Sachithanandan and JF Nunn et al. were the first investigators to demonstrate age-dependent airway closure in humans whilst breathing at residual volume. They observed the resulting desaturation was due to perfusion of unventilated alveoli. Their research findings still remains a highly cited British Journal of Anaesthesia publication with important implications for mechanical ventilatory support of the critically ill patient to correct the resulting hypoxaemia and atelectasis from the reduced lung volumes.
Upon returning to Malaysia, Sachithanandan was appointed consultant anaesthesiologist to the Johor Baru General Hospital where he practised for two periods. His most notable contribution as Johore State Anaesthetist was to establish the first public sector intensive care unit in Malaysia in 1968 at the Johor Baru General Hospital. This ICU inspired the establishment of similar units in several other state general hospitals nationwide over the next decade. In 2010, Malaysia reported availability of over four hundred operational critical care ICU beds across 36 different government hospitals with a 90% bed occupancy rate.
Sachithanandan and two colleagues also established Malaysia’s first postgraduate medical centre at JBGH in 1969. In 1972, Sachithanandan was elected President of the Malaysian Medical Association, the first anaesthetist to hold such office. He served as Chief of Anaesthesiology in Ipoh General Hospital establishing the state’s first postgraduate medical centre in 1976. As the Vice Dean of the inaugural Faculty board and subsequently as Dean of the Faculty of Anaesthesiologists, College of Surgeons of Malaysia, he was highly influential in developing local specialist training and accreditation criteria which helped lay the foundation for a future local Masters certification in anaesthesia. Over 450 Malaysian doctors have since successfully completed a masters-certified local postgraduate training programme in anaesthesiology. Training aside, T.Sachithanandan also pioneered and popularised the technique of regional anaesthesia nerve blockade here in Malaysia.
Sachithanandan was one of Malaysia's five pioneer consultant anaesthetists who founded the Malaysian Society of Anaesthesiologists in 1963 and subsequently became a distinguished past President of the MSA. He was one of the early Members of the Academy of Medicine, Malaysia. In 1980, as one of the original group of eight pioneer doctor-business partners, Sachithanandan was highly instrumental in the clinical design of the Johor Specialist Hospital, the first private hospital in the state of Johor and the country’s first Kumpulan Perubatan Johor hospital. He never commenced practice at the JSH which opened in early May 1981. From the humble origins of this first hospital, KPJ has emerged to become Malaysia’s leading premier private healthcare provider with an annual turnover in excess of a billion ringgit from a network of 21 private hospitals employing over 800 medical specialists and is listed on the main board of the Kuala Lumpur Stock Exchange.
Sachithanandan was awarded a state knighthood, the highly coveted Dato Paduka Mahkota Johor by HRH Sultan Ismail of Johor in 1980 for services to medicine and anaesthesia in particular. He died unexpectedly on 28 May 1981, aged forty-nine following a coronary artery bypass operation at London’s Harley Street Clinic. T.Sachithanandan’s legacy extends far beyond setting up that first ICU. He was an exceptionally competent anaesthesiologist who actively trained and inspired innumerous young specialists and was responsible for much of the early development of clinical anaesthesia and intensive care services nationally and particularly in the two large Malaysian states of Johor and Perak.His leadership in elevating the role and status of the anaesthesiologist in the care of the patients in the early days of anaesthesiology as an evolving discipline was a very significant contribution indeed. In 2018 the inaugural T.Sachithanandan Best Oral Presentation Award was presented by the Malaysian Society of Intensive Care in recognition of his pioneering work. The award will be presented henceforth at the annual ASMIC scientific meeting.
T.Sachithanandan served as President of the Johor Cricket Council, Vice President of the Malaysian Cricket Association and President of the Johor Baru Junior Chamber International in 1969/70. He was actively involved with the Johor Red Crescent Society, Area Surgeon of St. Johns Ambulance Brigade of Johor and Chairman of the Johor Blood Bank & Transfusion Service.
Sachithanandan married Punithavathy Sinnathuray in 1965. They had two children both Dublin-trained physicians.