Scosa
scosa was a South Australian organisation providing a range of supports to children and adults with disabilities. Initially it focused on people with cerebral palsy. In August 2019, it was announced that scosa was to merge into Novita.
History
scosa had its beginnings in the efforts of parents of children with cerebral palsy.In 1946, Norman Taylor, the then-president of The Crippled Children's Association of South Australia, invited Daphne Gum to return to Adelaide to establish a centre for the care of children with cerebral palsy. Gum was the Director of the Spastic Centre was established in the then Adelaide Children's Hospital, officially opening on 6 March 1946. The Centre used one room in the first-floor Outpatients' Department. As the lifts were old and unreliable, at times pupils were carried up and down the stairs. On 3 November 1949 the Centre moved to a prefabricated building of three rooms which had been purchased in Kermode Street, North Adelaide.
scosa was incorporated on 18 April 1950 as the South Australian Spastic Paralysis Welfare Association Inc.
scoca established a home and school at Woodville and also provided other services including: speech pathology; physiotherapy; occupational therapy; medical services; splint making; accommodation; with palliative care and a nursing home services.
From 1995 the Government of South Australia Department of Education took on the responsibility for children with disabilities and deinstitutionalisation led residents of institutional accommodation into the community, with CARA.