Jennie Cronin
Clinical Specialist Physiotherapist · MSc Applied Psychology
Integrated Wellbeing reflects the integration of healthcare experience, applied psychology and a deeply human understanding of how people live, cope and change.
I graduated with a BSc in Physiotherapy in 1999 and later completed a Masters in Musculoskeletal Physiotherapy at The University of Queensland, Australia. In 2025, I completed an MSc in Applied Psychology at University College Cork, graduating with first-class honours.
Over more than 25 years working in healthcare, including as a Clinical Specialist Physiotherapist, I have developed a deep appreciation for the multidimensional nature of health and wellbeing and for the role that communication, belief, behaviour and context play in shaping meaningful outcomes.
My work now sits at the intersection of healthcare and applied psychology, supporting a shift in how health is understood and delivered. It reflects a commitment to integrating scientific knowledge with a deeply human approach — recognising that health is shaped not only by biology, but by how we think, relate, cope, find meaning and live within the wider social and environmental contexts around us.
I maintain professional registration with CORU and am a member of the Irish Society of Chartered Physiotherapists and an Associate Member of the Psychological Society of Ireland.
In addition to clinical and educational work, I contribute to the Pregnancy Loss Research Group at University College Cork and the National Perinatal Bereavement Advisory Group. These roles reflect a commitment to compassionate, evidence-informed care and to strengthening how healthcare is experienced during vulnerable and significant life events.
Integrated Wellbeing represents an evolving body of work grounded in experience, shaped by psychology and guided by a belief that health is both deeply personal and influenced by the systems within which we live and work.
Jennie Cronin
BSc Physio · MSc Musculoskeletal · MSc Applied Psychology