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The Australian National University

History

Paul Gatenby, Foundation Dean

ANU Medical School can be viewed as a descendant of the University of Sydney’s Canberra Clinical School. Prior to its inception in 1993, students from University of Sydney, University of NSW and University of Queensland had been coming to Canberra to complete placements at Woden Valley Hospital for several years.

Under the guidance of Professor Paul Gatenby, the Canberra Clinical School developed a strong teaching program to the point of conducting the entire final year of University of Sydney’s five year undergraduate medical degree.

When the University of Sydney introduced a four year graduate program in 1996, the school became responsible for training 20 students in the entire years three and four curriculum and parts of years one and two.

During this time, the school also took the first steps toward its current reputation for cutting-edge medical research, establishing laboratories, a tissue and organ museum and an animal house at The Canberra Hospital.

By 2000, the school had become so successful the then Minister for Health, Michael Wooldridge, deemed that ANU should establish a stand-alone medical school. The current ANU Medical School was formed in 2002 with the appointment of Professor Gatenby as Foundation Dean and funding from the Department of Health & Ageing.

Building on the University of Sydney's curriculum, the school increased the importance of rural and Indigenous health, ethics and law, the social aspects of medicine and medical science. The first 80 students of the Bachelor of Medicine / Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) graduated in 2007.

The school has helped drive the development of first class health services in the ACT, improving medical care for the community; Professor Gatenby instigated the immunopathology service at The Canberra Hospital and the current Deputy Dean, Professor David Elwood, established the first foetal medicine unit in the ACT. The school continues to attract eminent medical researchers and educators to the region as well as medical practitioners from right across all specialties who see the presence of a medical school in the city as being important in their decision to practice here.

The current Dean, Professor Nicholas Glasgow, succeeded Professor Gatenby in 2008 and continues to strengthen the school’s first-class curriculum and internationally recognised medical research program.

Updated: 18 October 2011/ Responsible Officer:  Dean of Medicine / Page Contact:  Web Master