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Rehabilitation Teaching and Research Unit Overview
Our History
The first academic rehabilitation position at the Wellington
School of Medicine was funded by ACC and filled in the late 1980s
by Dr Chris Roy, a rehabilitation specialist from Scotland. He
returned to Scotland in 1992 and the Senior Lectureship in Rehabilitation
remained vacant until filled by Dr Harry McNaughton in December
1994. A nucleus of teaching and research staff was built up over
the following three years with the launch of the Postgraduate
Diploma in Rehabilitation in 1997. Dr. Kath McPherson joined the
team in 1997 and provided much of the academic backbone of the
postgraduate teaching programme. The Rehabilitation Teaching and
Research Unit was opened officially in 1998 by Garry Wilson, Chief
Executive of ACC. In 2001 Harry and Kath both left to pursue other
things. Harry has contributed enormously to mission hospitals
in Northern India. Kath is the Chair of Rehabilitation at AUT.
Associate Professor Richard Siegert led the RTRU until he took
up a position with Lynne Turner Stokes in London in 2007.
Our Teaching
Most of our teaching is by distance learning so we accept students
from throughout New Zealand plus a small number from overseas. In
general we admit only people who are already qualified health professionals
e.g. general practitioners, nurses, occupational therapists, physiotherapists,
psychologists, case-managers, exercise therapists and social workers.
The principal qualification that we offer is the Postgraduate
Diploma in Rehabilitation. This course is designed for health
professionals who want to develop their theoretical and practical
knowledge in the field of rehabilitation. Most of our students
work full-time and will complete the Diploma part-time over two
years. There are four academic papers (120 points) in the Diploma
and students typically complete two papers each year over two
years. Students who complete the PGDiploma may be eligible to
go on to complete a Masters
of Health Sciences (Rehabilitation).
We teach a range of papers that include musculoskeletal,
neurological, goal
setting, cardiac and pulmonary,
older persons, personal
and psychological factors, family
systems, vocational rehabilitation-
as well as two core papers devoted to fundamental
principles of rehabilitation and the
assessment of outcome. Throughout the entire programme the
emphasis is on critical thinking - questioning what constitutes
good rehabilitation practice and the empirical and theoretical
basis for this. Where there are inadequate empirical data to support
practice, we point this out and expect students to be able to
critically evaluate what they do in their own practice and possibly
develop ideas for how our knowledge base in rehabilitation can
be improved.
In 2002 we instituted a one year Postgraduate
Certificate in Health Sciences (Clinical Rehabilitation).
This course is designed for rehabilitation professionals who want
to develop their theoretical and practical skills base. The PGCertificate
is funded by Health Workforce New Zealand and consequently it
is only open to people who are employed mainly by a DHB where
the primary focus is on clinical rehabilitation. For some students
the Certificate is a valuable way of updating their skills and
knowledge of rehabilitation. For others it can be a stepping stone
to more advanced qualifications in the field, such as the PGDiploma
in Rehabilitation.
We also offer the chance to complete a Masters
of Health Sciences (Rehabilitation) and a Doctor of Philosophy
(PhD).
Our Research
We believe that good rehabilitation is evidence-based. Yet so much
of what we do in rehabilitation is of unknown effectiveness - and
when it does work we often can't specify which components are the
important ones. On an even more fundamental level, it is not always
clear how to know when rehabilitation "works". In other
words, what actually constitutes a good outcome?
At the RTRU we are vitally interested in conducting research into
both the process and the outcomes of rehabilitation. This may involve
qualitative or quantitative research methods. Thus while our team
has diverse interests as individuals, underlying all our research
are two fundamental questions: Does it work? How does it work? Will
Taylor calls this "unpacking the black box that is rehabilitation".
Our staff have interests in rehabilitation research on various
problems including continence, chronic pain, lowe back pain, multiple
sclerosis, rheumatic disorders, schizophrenia, stroke, spinal
cord injury and Parkinson's Disease.
RTRU is happy to act as a resource for rehabilitation health professionals
who wish to "do some research" without them necessarily
being clear as to how to go about it. We may be consulted on issues
of research design, methodology and data management. Enquiries from
people interested in a research based degree (MHealSc or PhD) are
especially welcomed.
Staff of the RTRU have been successful
in recent years in obtaining substantial research grants from
the following agencies: Arthritis Foundation, Health Research
Council, Otago University, NZ Spinal Trust and the Wellington
Medical Research Foundation. We have close links with other academic
departments at the University of Otago Wellington as well as some
of the rehabilitation and medical wards at Kenepuru Hospital and
Hutt Hospital. We have close links with the Alan Bean Centre and
the Burwood Spinal Unit and are part of the University of Otago
Rehabilitation and Disability
Research Theme.
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