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The History and Development of the Human Genetics Society of Australasia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 February 2012

Grant R. Sutherland*
Affiliation:
Department of Genetic Medicine, Women's and Children's Hospital, Adelaide, Australia; Department of Paediatrics and School of Molecular and Biomedical Science, University of Adelaide, Australia. grant.sutherland@adelaide.edu.au
*
*Address for correspondence: Grant R. Sutherland, Emeritus Geneticist, Department of Genetic Medicine, Women's and Children's Hospital, Adelaide, 5006, Australia.

Abstract

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The Human Genetics Society of Australasia is a vibrant professional society with more than 900 members that promotes and regulates the practice of human and medical genetics in Australia and New Zealand. The growth of human genetics was stimulated by the development of diagnostic clinical cytogenetics laboratories in the early to mid 1960s. This coincided with the recognition by medical specialists, mainly pediatricians, that genetic disorders, especially inborn errors of metabolism and birth defects, were of clinical interest and potentially challenging areas for their skills. The organization of professionals in human genetics was slow to evolve. There was an early Western Australian Human Genetics Society, and the cytogenetics community had begun to meet annually from about 1966 but was coordinated by a mailing list rather than as a formal organization. In 1976, as part of the celebrations of the Centenary Year of the Adelaide Children's Hospital, a clinical genetics meeting involving several high profile international speakers and most of the senior medical geneticists in Australia and New Zealand along with the annual meeting of the loose-knit cytogeneticists group agreed that a small working group be charged with setting up a Human Genetics Society. The society was formally incorporated in South Australia in 1977.

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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2008