| The first
formal program of education for prosthetists and orthotists in Australia
was established by the Repatriation Department in 1965. Known as
the "XYZ course", the purpose of the training was to improve the
clinical abilities and professionalism of limb makers and fitters
in the Repatriation Artificial Limb and Appliance Centres (RALACs).
The course appears not to have satisfied
these objectives and in 1973, the Department initiated discussions
with a number of tertiary institutions about the establishment of
a course in prosthetics and orthotics modelled on overseas programs.
As a result of these discussions, a three year Diploma of Applied
Science (Prosthetics and Orthotics) was established at the Lincoln
Institute of Health Sciences in Melbourne.
In 1992, the Diploma course was upgraded
to a three and a half year Bachelor of Prosthetics and Orthotics
degree. In 1994, the four year Honours degree was offered for the
first time and by 1996 the first Prosthetics and Orthotics doctoral
student had enrolled.
In 1987, Lincoln Institute amalgamated
with La Trobe University to become the Faculty of Health Sciences.
Between 1993 and 1998, a new home for the Faculty of Health Sciences
was developed at the Bundoora campus of La Trobe University in the
northern suburbs of Melbourne. Over this period, the Faculty gradually
relocated from the original campus in the CBD.
In 1997, the P&O department, by then
known as the National Centre for Prosthetics and Orthotics, was
relocated to Bundoora Campus with clinical and laboratory work taking
place in the purpose designed teaching facilities of the Health
Sciences Clinic.
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