Sally is a highly experienced physiotherapist with a strong background in neurological rehabilitation and the assessment and treatment of vestibular conditions. After qualifying from Manchester Metropolitan University in 2010, she began her career in Jersey, where she spent six years delivering a wide range of physiotherapy services in both hospital and community settings. 

In 2017, driven by a spirit of adventure and personal challenge, Sally completed the Inca Trail to Machu Picchu and climbed Mount Kilimanjaro. Over the next nine months, she journeyed to New Zealand, where she then devoted eight years to working in acute care settings with a focus on neurological patients. At Hutt Hospital, she served as Deputy Chair of the Stroke Working Group, collaborating with a multidisciplinary team to enhance stroke rehabilitation across acute and community settings. She subsequently joined Wellington Regional Hospital, working on neurosurgical and neurology wards and contributing to clinical education. She presented on early mobility in acute stroke care at a Regional Stroke Quality Day, underlining the importance of timely rehabilitation in maximizing recovery. 

Specialising in vestibular rehabilitation, Sally completed focused training in New Zealand and now holds a Certificate in Vestibular Rehabilitation. This specialty allows her to support patients experiencing dizziness, imbalance or vertigo—conditions well-served by vestibular rehabilitation therapy, a clinical approach that uses targeted exercises such as gaze stabilisation, positional manoeuvres, habituation, and balance retraining to promote neuroplastic recovery.  

In 2025, Sally returned to Jersey to be closer to her family and is enthusiastically rediscovering all the Island has to offer. With a calm, patient-centred demeanour and unwavering commitment to evidence-based practice, she helps individuals regain balance, confidence, and independence through tailored rehabilitation programmes. 

Sally is fully registered with the Health & Care Professions Council (HCPC) and the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (CSP) and holds membership in the Association of Physiotherapists Interested in Vestibular Rehabilitation (ACPIVR).