What is a PODIATRIST?

The podiatry profession has undergone considerable growth and change in recent years.

This page has been produced by the Australian Podiatry Association to provide other health professionals with an overview of these developments and to outline the role of the podiatry profession in the treatment of problems of the feet and lower limbs.

A podiatrist is health professional who deals with the prevention, diagnosis, treatment and rehabilitation of medical and surgical conditions of the feet and lower limbs.
The conditions podiatrists treat include those resulting from bone and joint disorders such as arthritis and soft-tissue and muscular pathologies as well as neurological and circulatory diseases. Podiatrists are also able to diagnose and treat any complications of the above, which affect the lower limb, including skin and nail disorders, corns, calluses and in growing toenails. Foot injuries and infections gained through sport or other activities are also diagnosed and treated by podiatrists.

To become a podiatrist a practitioner must complete a Bachelor of Podiatry and be registered with state podiatry registration boards. (Until 1977, Australian podiatrists were known as chiropodists.

The official name change to podiatry reflected the upgrading of education levels and an expansion in the scope of practice by the profession.)

Some areas in which podiatrists may develop a special interest in, include:

 

How are podiatrists educated?

As already outlined, to become a podiatrist a practitioner must complete a Bachelor of Podiatry (Applied Science).
Podiatry qualifications are specifically aimed at addressing the internal and external medicine involved in the systemic diseases and local pathology affecting the feet.

In Australia the profession also has formed post graduate qualifications in areas including sports medicine and surgery.

 

The skills of a PODIATRIST