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Long COVID: Journeying together through the fog

About us

Te Whare Whakamātūtū | The Rehabilitation Teaching and Research Unit

Te Whare Whakamātūtū | The Rehabilitation Teaching and Research Unit is an interprofessional team (physiotherapy, occupational therapy, clinical psychology and medicine) of researchers and educators based at the University of Otago in Wellington. Guiding our choices and actions in teaching and research are these principles:

  1. Relationship: Create safe and inclusive spaces for developing collaborative and reciprocal relationships in learning and knowledge generation.
  2. Responsiveness: Stay curious, listen actively, and enable rehabilitation stakeholders to shape what is taught and researched.
  3. Reframing: Challenge what is taken for granted in what rehabilitation is, where, when and how it is done, and prioritise the voices of those with knowledge of rehabilitation from lived experience.

Our aim, in all our mahi, is to increase knowledge and its translation to support equity of rehabilitation access, experience and outcome. Our vision is that every person experiencing the enduring consequences of a health condition is enabled to live a flourishing life.


Centre for Person-Centred Research (PCR)

The Centre for Person-Centred Research (PCR) is a transdisciplinary research centre based in the Health and Rehabilitation Research Institute and School of Clinical Sciences at AUT. Our team members bring a diversity of perspectives to our research, including physiotherapy, occupational therapy, speech and language therapy, critical health psychology, Māori health, sociology, medical anthropology, and nursing.

Our goal is to contribute to transformative change in rehabilitation policy and practice to optimise outcomes for people living with the enduring consequences of injury or illness. To that end, three interrelated purposes guide our work:

  1. Rethinking rehabilitation, including critically exploring the taken-for-granted structures and practices which transcend disciplinary boundaries in rehabilitation, but which may be crucial to outcome.
  2. Embedding person-centredness, including challenging assumptions regarding what is valued as legitimate rehabilitation ‘work’ and developing and embedding person-centred cultures of care into routine rehabilitation practice.
  3. Making a difference, including developing insights into what constitutes a good rehabilitation outcome from the perspective of people living with the consequences of injury or illness, and actively seeking to impact rehabilitation policy and practice to optimise those outcomes


Health Services Research Centre|Te Hikuwai Rangahau Hauora

The Health Services Research Centre |Te Hikuwai Rangahau Hauora (Victoria University of Wellington) was founded in 1993, and since then has contributed significantly to health services research in Aotearoa New Zealand and internationally.

Three major grants are currently hosted at the Centre, an HRC Programme Grant “Enhancing primary health care services to improve health in Aotearoa New Zealand”, a Royal Society (Marsden Fund) study, “The Black Box of Evaluation” and a Ministry of Health (MOH) funded study, “Impacts of COVID-19 in Aotearoa | Ngā Kawekawe o Mate Korona”, as well as a variety of smaller studies. The staff are a multidisciplinary group, with expertise in Māori health research, Pacific health research and qualitative, quantitative, mixed-methods analysis.

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