The New Zealand Herald

Physio accused of ‘creepy’ touch

Intimate regions weren’t brushed accidental­ly, young athlete insists

- Open Justice — Te Pātiti, a Public Interest Journalism initiative funded through NZ on Air Qiuyi Tan

Ayoung athlete said she started freaking out after a handful of sessions with a physiother­apist where his massages escalated from touching the top of her bare buttocks to more intimate areas.

She brushed it off at first but finally told him to stop at their last session.

“I was angry and felt really uncomforta­ble and violated,” she told a Health Practition­ers Disciplina­ry Tribunal in Auckland yesterday.

Both the woman and physiother­apist’s identities are protected.

The woman was 18 when she started seeing the physiother­apist in May 2019 for pain in her lower back after falling awkwardly while playing sports.

He asked her to perform lunges and other movements before asking her to lie down.

Without warning, she said, he lifted her top to bra height or slightly higher, pulled her pants and underwear halfway down, and rubbed the top of her buttocks.

“After that I found him a bit creepy,” she told the tribunal, saying she recalled his fingernail­s being “quite long”.

The buttock massages occurred at every appointmen­t thereafter, with the physiother­apist’s behaviour escalating, becoming bolder at each session, she said.

The man would be “dead silent” during the massages.

“There was no communicat­ion from him at all about the treatment and I had no idea why he was doing what he was doing.”

She said his hands brushed against her vagina over clothing repeatedly at earlier sessions and, at their last session in July the same year, he put a stabilisin­g hand so high up on her thigh that it made skin-to-skin contact with her vagina at least once when her underwear was pushed aside.

“It’s quite an alarming propositio­n that a physiother­apist would touch a patient’s vagina even once,” the man’s lawyer Rhys Walters said.

“But you’re saying this happened many times?” he asked the woman, who said yes.

She told the tribunal she was young at the time and did not speak up to the physiother­apist at first.

“My mother said it was fine and that’s how treatment is, ” she said. “I thought I was wrong.

The one time the patient’s mother accompanie­d her to treatment felt “completely different” — the physiother­apist did not pull her pants down as far down or rub her hamstrings as high up, she said.

Her mother also told the tribunal they laughed it off initially because she wanted to give the physiother­apist the benefit of the doubt.

Later, she thought about taking her daughter to a different physiother­apist but didn’t — “Which I now regret,” she said.

The woman said she had seen physiother­apists and chiropract­ors since she was 13 for sporting injuries and none had put their hands in such intimate areas. “I didn’t think it was accidental.”

The man also took hers and another teenage patient’s phone numbers from the clinic’s computer system and texted them using his personal mobile phone.

He has admitted the messages were not necessary or related to their treatment.

Clinic owners told the hearing the independen­t contractor had been with them four or five years at the time. “He was quite good at the other practices,” said a director.

The tribunal continues today.

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