Physiotherapist: Tina Sun MSc PT
Tina Sun is a registered physical therapist who has worked in hospitals, private orthopedic clinics, and home care. The purpose of her work is to improve her patients’ self-confidence, self-esteem and their overall independence. She has worked with people who have experienced the following:
1. | Surgeries and joint replacements (ankle, knee, hip, wrist, elbow, shoulder, spine) |
2. | Repetitive strain injuries (tennis and golfer’s elbow, jumper’s knee, rotator cuff, plantar fasciitis, ankle sprain, achilles tendinopathy) |
3. | Activity/sports injuries (neck and back strain, ACL, MCL strain, meniscal tears) |
4. | Balance deficiencies resulting from physical injuries or age |
5. | Gait training for people who had stroke |
Tina is naturally intuitive and is a divergent thinker. Her style and approach to physical therapy is unique to each patient because each patient is unique. She is hands-on and uses soft tissue and manual therapy techniques extensively in conjunction with acupuncture and exercise therapy programs with or without equipment.
Tina is fluent in English and Mandarin
Chiropractor: Dr. Thelma Zee DC
Dr Thelma has been practicing a wide variety of healing modalities in New Zealand, USA, and Canada. She completed her Doctor of Chiropractic degree in New Zealand College of Chiropractic. She is trained in Upper cervical specifics, Gonstead, Activator protocol, Diversified technique, Graston (Gua Sha), Bio-Geometic Integration (BGI), Network Spinal Analysis (NSA), Neuro-Emotional technique (NET), Sacral-Occipital Technique (SOT), and Thompson. In addition, she is also trained in traditional Chinese medicine, herbology, and acupuncture. She draws upon her diverse training to facilitate healing, ease, and clarity for clients dealing with a wide range of challenges from physical and emotional trauma to chemicals and environmental stresses. Dr Thelma is not only an advocate of alternative healing, she integrates what she teaches in her everyday life. She practices mindfulness through Chinese tea ceremonies and takes time to enjoy nature by immersing herself in old growth forests, mountains, and along creeks and trails while collecting herbs and foraging for medicinal mushrooms.