The foundation members of Sports Medicine New Zealand at
the Dunedin Town Hall yesterday. Pictured (from left) are
Mr John Heslop, Dr Ted Nye and Dr Norrie Jefferson. Dr Dave
Gerrard (right) joined a year after the organisation's
inception. (Click to enlarge for full image) Photo by
Gregor Richardson.
Specialist treatment of sports injuries is commonplace
today, but it was not the case 45 years ago when Sports
Medicine New Zealand was formed.
Three of the founding members - Dr Norrie Jefferson, general
surgeon John Heslop and heart specialist Dr Ted Nye - were
honoured during the annual conference at the Dunedin Town
Hall yesterday.
Before 1961, athletics injuries were treated by general
practitioners, who had little knowledge of treating sports
injuries.
"We had nothing before that and injuries were seldom treated
properly," Heslop said.
Heslop said Sports Medicine NZ had given uniformity to the
treatment of sports injuries throughout the country.
"When we first formed the organisation a sportsman would get
different treatment in different parts of the country," he
said.
"That's why we wanted to get more specialised training for
doctors in sports medicine."
Sports Medicine NZ was founded at Dunedin in July 1963, was
affiliated to the International Federation of Sports Medicine
in 1965, and is now one of more than 50 organisations
worldwide.
It has 12 regional branches in New Zealand. Norrie Jefferson
was the first president.
"I am very thrilled with the advances it has made in New
Zealand since we started in 1963. It gives me a lot of
satisfaction,"he said.
"In the early days I was concerned about the lack of interest
in treating sports injuries. It has developed considerably
and athletes are now supported as soon as their injuries
occur."
Nye said the founding of Sports Medicine NZ was part of an
international movement to look at the application of medicine
to sport.
"It was realised there was a meeting ground between the two,"
Nye said.
"This was recognised by setting up a professional
organisation to look at the science of medicine and its
application to sport. It needed to happen and was timely."
Jefferson evolved an interest in sports medicine when he was
an Army Medical Officer in Japan after World War 2.
He discussed his interests with Dr Mayne Smeeton when they
worked together in Japan and the interest continued when they
both landed jobs at Dunedin Hospital in 1950.
The spark that ignited the formation of the association
started in 1961 when future Governor General Sir Arthur
Porritt spoke at a special meeting during the British Medical
Association (New Zealand Branch) conference at Auckland.
He had just formed a similar organisation in England. The
Paralympic movement developed from that later in the decade.
The same stimulus formed both organisations.
Sports Medicine NZ
Founding members
Dr Norrie Jefferson (inaugural
president)
Dr Ted Nye
Mr John Heslop
Dr Jack Kilpatrick
Murray Brennan
(secretary)
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.