Studio portrait of Elizabeth Kenny also known as Sister Kenny. Born in Warialda, NSW, Kenny began ...

Accession Number P04258.001
Collection type Photograph
Object type Colour - Film original transparency (positive) other
Maker Unknown
Date made c 1923
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Copyright

Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain

Public Domain Mark This item is in the Public Domain

Description

Studio portrait of Elizabeth Kenny also known as Sister Kenny. Born in Warialda, NSW, Kenny began her career as a bush nurse in rural Australia, where she encountered her first cases of infantile paralysis or polio, and developed her own treatment methods by stimulating and re-educating the affected muscles, rather than immobilizing patients with splints and casts. During the First World War she enlisted as a nurse in the Australian Army Nursing Service (AANS), serving on hospital ships that brought home the wounded. In 1917 she was promoted to the rank of Sister, a title she used for the rest of her life. Returning to civilian nursing after the war, Kenny established four clinics to treat polio and cerebal palsy patients using her own methods. Despite her success, the conservative medical profession in Australia would not support her treatments. In 1940 she travelled to the United States, where she demonstrated her techniques during the height of the polio epidemic, and eventually gained widespread recognition. The Elizabeth Kenny Institute in Minneapolis, Minnesota, was set up in 1943 to train nurses and physiotherapists in her methods. Her celebrity status was confirmed in 1946, when a movie was made of Sister Kenny's life. After decades of tireless medical work, fundraising and lobbying, Kenny returned to Australia. She developed Parkinsons disease in 1952 and died in Toowoomba the same year. Her book 'My Battle and Victory' was published posthumously in 1955. Her brother was 171 Private William Harold Kenny DCM an original member of the Military Mounted Police (MMP) who served as a bodyguard to General Birdwood on Gallipoli and survived the war.

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