Australian speech pathologist, author and businesswoman
Dimity Dornan AO is a speech pathologist, author, social entrepreneur, bionics advocate, researcher, and businesswoman in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. She is the founder of the Hear and Say Centre for Deaf Children on 6 July 1992 and helped initiate newborn hearing screening in Queensland hospitals, the first such program in Australia. She has received Australian of the Year for Queensland in 2003, and the Suncorp Queenslander of the Year in 2010.[1][2]Griffith University offers a Dimity Dornan Hear and Say Master of Speech Pathology Scholarship for second year students who have an interest in paediatric speech pathology and working in a regional area. [3]
Dornan has been attributed for her ground-breaking auditory verbal work which has assisted families and hearing-impaired children throughout Queensland. Hear and Say is now a global Hearing Health Education and Development Program with six centres across Queensland, including a telepractice for remote regions of Queensland.[5][6]
Dornan is the founder of Bionics Queensland (BioniQ) which was established to promote the development of the human bionic industry in Queensland.[7]
Dornan is also the founder of Human Bionics Interface, which an international network of bionics researchers, clinicians, businesses that share projects to delivery bionics solutions.[7][8]
Dornan retired from the role as Executive Director, Hear and Say, and moved into an ambassador role in 2022.
In 2007, Dornan drew the ire of many in the Deaf community for labelling deafness as "a scourge" and for comparing advances in cochlear implants and hearing technology to the eradication of Polio,[12][13] with one Deaf writer describing Dornan's remarks as "vilification" and accusing her of promoting "cultural genocide".[14]