Leeanne Carey
Professor Leeanne Carey is a world leading Australian neuroscientist in occupational therapy and stroke rehabilitation and recovery research. She is the founding leader of the Neurorehabilitation and Recovery research group in the Stroke division at the Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health in Melbourne, Australia, and currently holds a Future Fellowship awarded by the Australian Research Council.
Early life and education
Leeanne Carey graduated high school from Chavoin College in Melbourne in 1977, where she was awarded Dux of School and Special Distinction in the Higher School Certificate English exam.Carey began her tertiary education at the Lincoln Institute of Health Sciences, where she graduated with a Bachelor of Applied Sciences in Occupational Therapy in 1987. In 1993, Carey became the first person in Australia to complete a Doctor of Philosophy in Occupational Therapy through La Trobe University. Her PhD thesis investigated training effects and quantitative measurement of tactile and proprioceptive discrimination loss after stroke, which was successfully passed without revision.
Work
1981-1990
Prior to beginning her full-time PhD candidature in 1990, Carey worked as a Grade 1 Occupational Therapist at the Manvantara Geriatric Rehabilitation Hospital between 1981 and 1983. Between 1983 and 1989, she was appointed as a Senior Tutor for undergraduate classes in the School of Occupational Therapy at the Lincoln Institute of Health Sciences. In 1987, Carey was promoted to a Lecturer position in the Lincoln School of Health Sciences at La Trobe University shortly after the two institutes had merged. In 1989, Carey was appointed Chief Occupational Therapist at the Hampton Rehabilitation Hospital where she worked for one year.1993-2014 present
For the next two decades following the completion of her PhD, Carey worked her way up the academic ladder from multiple post-doctoral fellowships to founding her own research lab in Neurorehabilitation and Recovery Research in the Stroke Division at the National Stroke Research Institute in 2004, which was later transferred to the Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health. She was awarded Research Fellowships from institutions including the Australian Research Council, National Stroke Research Institute, Brain Research Institute, and the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.In 2004, Carey was appointed Adjunct Professor for the Department of Occupational Therapy at La Trobe University and in 2013 became a member of the Faculty of Health Sciences Research Committee of the university. In 2010 was appointed to the Faculty of the Florey Institute. In addition, in 2013 she was elected to the Australian Academy of Science and at the same time was elected the Chair of the Inaugural Australian Occupational Therapy Research Foundation.
As of November 2014, Carey's Neurorehabilitation and Recovery research lab has grown to a team of 24 researchers, including 1 post-doc, 6 research staff, 10 affiliates, and 7 students from disciplines ranging from occupational therapy, physiotherapy, neurology, psychology and neuroscience.