All posts by Magda Fourie

I qualified in 1978 and became a member of the South African Society of Physiotherapy (SASP) since then. As previous President of the SASP, I became very involved in the management and strategic vision of the SASP and the profession. Currently I am part of the committee and the history project for the centenary celebrations planned for 2024.

History of Physiotherapy at the University of Pretoria

Introduction The history of the development of Physiotherapy as a profession as well as the development of Physiotherapy as a professional degree at the University of Pretoria should be seen in the greater context of the Development of Physiotherapy as a profession in South Africa. In the first section of

Black Physiotherapy Education continued:  The first coloured Students allowed University of the Western Cape

When reflecting on the history of an academic institution, one cannot ignore the historical and political context in which it was established. The ruling Nationalist Party ensured separate development through its Apartheid policy of racial segregation at all levels of society, including education. Access to historically white universities (HWUs) was

History of Physiotherapy Education in South Africa – the SMU & UKZN story

Physiotherapy Department at Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University (SMU) (Information provided by the current HOD, Prof Douglas Maleka, class of 1976 and all MEDUNSA/UL/SMU graduates, associates and friends, especially Mrs Melody Nguna (nee Mji) and Ms Shoeshoe Zulu (nee Mopeli)) Physiotherapy was one of the professions reserved exclusively for the

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History of the First Physiotherapy University Schools in South Africa

University of the Witwatersrand In 1924 the department of physiotherapy had been established in the Johannesburg Hospital and had been opened to patients in September 1925. Dr EB Woolf had been appointed as head of this department in February 1925. On the 12th April 1926, a meeting between Professor Raymond

The Development of Physiotherapy in South Africa

In 1921 a small group of masseurs in Cape Town banded together to form the Certified Masseurs Association, primarily to rehabilitate soldiers after World War I as well as the patients affected by the polio epidemic also hitting South Africa. In the same year the first pioneer group in the

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