Drop Down Menu
  Search...
 
  Business Directory Ad  

Laura’s a chip off the old block 21.06.10

Buncrana girl follows in father’s footsteps

by Damian Dowds, Inishowen Independent

THERE was, perhaps, something inevitable about the career that Buncrana girl Laura Reid chose. The former Scoil Íosagáin and Scoil Mhuire pupil completed a degree in sports therapy at the University of Birmingham and is currently studying part time for a Masters Degree in Osteopathy at the British College of Osteopathic Medicine in London.
Her father Bosco is well known locally, having worked as an osteopath in Buncrana for many years. For the past 12 months and more, Laura has practiced sports therapy alongside her father.
“I used to work as secretary in my dad’s practice, so I’ve always been interested in healing injuries and osteopathy,” she said. “I saw the results that he got when he worked with people and was impressed by that – it was a great motivation for me to keep going.
“He taught me a lot of things, and he’s great to bounce things off,” she said. “I’m at a bit of an advantage over other students doing the Masters because my dad is like a walking, talking textbook for me.”
Sports therapy is a discipline that’s specifically concerned with the prevention of injury and the rehabilitation of the patient back to optimum levels of fitness, regardless of age and ability.
It’s based on the principles of sport and exercise sciences, incorporating physiological and pathological processes, to prepare the participant for training, competition and, where relevant, work.
Sport was an important part of Laura’s life before sports therapy came along, and it continues to play
a big part.
“I’ve always been interested in and involved in sport,” she says. “As a child, I was into athletics, Gaelic football and golf and at the moment I’m trying to get into cycling and swimming.”
She also lines out with Illies in the Inishowen Ladies Soccer League. Good enough to have been a Republic of Ireland schoolgirl triallist, she currently plays up front for Illies but prefers the left side of midfield.
While in Birmingham she played Gaelic football with the John Mitchel’s club. “I really enjoyed it, it was like a little piece of home and was a great way to meet other Irish girls – including some from Buncrana.”
After completing her Leaving Certificate, the 21 year-old studied sports therapy at university in Birmingham, a period she describes as probably the best three years of her life.
“It was a massive change from Buncrana – a real culture shock. Birmingham’s a very multi-cultural city and I just loved every minute of it.”
She was required to produce a dissertation as part of her degree, and having spent a season working with the Buncrana Gaelic footballers that had yielded a wealth of first hand information on sports injuries, she decided to work on the little known connection between pelvic alignment and hamstring injuries.
“Daddy had spoken about it, and Michael Owen [the current Man Utd striker] had problems with it, so it was on my mind when my tutor asked about a topic for my dissertation,” she recalled. “Because of the demands of Gaelic football, hamstring injuries are very common and I had a lot of information collected from working with the Buncrana footballers.”
The 10,000 word dissertation became all consuming. Laura recalls taking it away with her on a family holiday, refining and painstakingly honing it into something she was happy with. She did determine a link between pelvic misalignment and hamstring injuries. Pelvic misalignment has a number of causes, including poor posture and too much sitting at desks at school or work.
“There are, of course, treatments available and exercises that can be done to alleviate the problem,” Laura says. “Pelvic misalignment can also lead to lower back pain but it’s very treatable.”
At the practice she shares with her father in Buncrana, Laura sees a mixture of patients of all ages. From sportspeople suffering from ankle injuries to more elderly patients suffering from arthritis. Lately, she has been working with cyclists in the Four Masters Cycling club as she extends her experience. Cyclists have different body shapes, and encounter different injuries to footballers or runners, and the experience of working with the Four Masters club will, Laura believes, stand to her in the long run.
In addition to practising in Buncrana, she travels to London every three weeks as part of her Masters course.
“Taking on a five year part time course so soon after doing my BSc was a big decision to make,” she adds, “but I’ve done it and will work hard on it.”
“The sports therapy degree, and my work on patients, has been a great foundation for the Masters in Osteopathy. It has made me very comfortable with patients and has given me a really good grounding.”
Starting in July, Laura will write a series on articles in the Inishowen Independent based on her dissertation and giving general advice on health and fitness.
Return to > Top Stories    > News    > Home