Australian nurse Elizabeth Kenny was a pioneer in physical therapy. Born on 20 September 1880 at Kelly's Gully, a township just west of the New South Wales town of Warialda, her family then moved to the small town of Nobby on the Darling Downs, near Toowoomba, Queensland.
An accident during her teenage years, in which she broke her wrist, sparked her interest in anatomy. Whilst recovering, Elizabeth keenly questioned her doctor and mentor, Dr. Aeneas McDonnell, about the workings of the human body. Though untrained, in 1911 she began working as a bush nurse in the area, even starting up a hospital in nearby Clifton. At the outbreak of World War I, she volunteered to serve as a nurse. Due to the dire need for nurses, the untrained Kenny was accepted to work on soldier transport ships, and the experience she gained in this venture earned her the official title of "Sister".
Sister Kenny continued to work as a nurse after the war, and even improved the design of stretchers used in ambulances on the Darling Downs. Marketing the stretcher as the "Sylvie Stretcher", Kenny gave the profits to the Australian Country Women's Association who managed sales and manufacture of the invention. Her initiative gained the attention of a family on a cattle station near Townsville, who arranged for her to come and care for their daughter who had been disabled by polio. Her methods of care and treatment enabled the girl to completely recover. She gradually achieved acclaim for her methods by the many polio-stricken children she treated and cured, but criticism from the medical fraternity for her lack of training.
Unlike other methods of the time, Kenny's treatment opposed immobilising affected limbs with casts or braces. She advocated treating children during the acute stage of polio and using hot compresses. However, doctors would not permit her to treat patients until after the first stage of the disease or until muscle spasms had ceased. Instead, she designed a programme of passive exercises to stimulate function.
Kenny's pioneering methods were gradually adopted by more physicians as she travelled to the USA to promote them. During her 11-year stay in America, she opened numerous Kenny Treatment Centres. Although her processes were criticised by many doctors, her dramatic results in affected children spoke for themselves. Her lasting legacy is her methodology for rehabilitating muscles, which formed the foundation for physical therapy, or what is commonly known as physiotherapy.
Kenny returned to Australia in 1951, and died on 30 November 1952. Her grave lies in Nobby Cemetery.
Australian nurse Elizabeth Kenny was a pioneer in physical therapy. Born in 1880 nor far from Warialda in New South Wales town, her family then moved to Nobby on the Darling Downs, Queensland.
An accident during her teenage years, in which she broke her wrist, sparked her interest in anatomy. Though untrained, in 1911 she began working as a bush nurse in Nobby, even starting up a hospital in nearby Clifton. During World War I, she served as a nurse on soldier transport ships.
Sister Kenny continued to work as a nurse after the war, and even improved the design of stretchers used in ambulances on the Darling Downs. Marketing the stretcher as the "Sylvie Stretcher", Kenny gave the profits to the Australian Country Women's Association who managed sales and manufacture of the invention. Her initiative gained the attention of a family on a cattle station near Townsville, who arranged for her to come and care for their daughter who had been disabled by polio. Her methods of care and treatment enabled the girl to completely recover. She gradually achieved acclaim for her methods by the many polio-stricken children she treated and cured, but criticism from the medical fraternity for her lack of training.
Unlike other methods of the time, Kenny's treatment opposed immobilising affected limbs with casts or braces. She advocated treating children during the acute stage of polio and using hot compresses. However, doctors would not permit her to treat patients until after the first stage of the disease or until muscle spasms had ceased. Instead, she designed a programme of passive exercises to stimulate function.
Kenny's pioneering methods were gradually adopted by more physicians as she travelled to the USA to promote them. During her 11-year stay in America, she opened numerous Kenny Treatment Centres. Although her processes were criticised by many doctors, her dramatic results in affected children spoke for themselves. Her lasting legacy is her methodology for rehabilitating muscles, which formed the foundation for physical therapy, or what is commonly known as physiotherapy.
He who angers you conquers you.
Nobby
Elizabeth Kenny was 72 when she died
Yes, Elizabeth Kenny had 7 other siblings
she was born in 1921 ( kenny)
Sister Elizabeth Kenny was not married. She adopted Mary, her daughter, who although now very elderly, lives on the Sunshine Coast, north of Brisbane, Queensland. Apparently she was in love with a South African man during the war. He later married and died quite early on.
Kenny Donabedian goes by Kenny D.
Elizabeth Kenny was a nurse.
Elizabeth Kenny was 72 when she died
Elizabeth Kenny died on the 30th November 1952 in Queensland.
Yes, Elizabeth Kenny had 7 other siblings
did Elizabeth Kenny have a husband
Sister Kenny's birth name is Elizabeth Kenny.
Elizabeth Kenny was an Australian nurse. She is famous for developing treatment theories that would become the foundation of physical therapy.
nursing
Medicine
no
She died from an old age
A cure for polio