Rudiger Reer

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Rüdiger Reer (* 1963 ) is a German sports doctor and university professor .

Life

Reer, who received a scholarship from the Bavarian Gifted Education Scholarship, studied medicine in Regensburg and Würzburg between 1983 and 1991 , during his studies he also completed stays abroad at the University of Tasmania in Australia , the University of Auckland in New Zealand , at Yale University , from the University of California, San Diego and Harvard University (both in the United States ).

As an active athlete, Reer was South German junior runner-up in table tennis and Bavarian university champion in doubles in the same sport.

In 1992 and 1993 Reer worked as a doctor in Warendorf  at the Olympic base there and at the Bundeswehr sports school. From 1993 to 1996 he held a position as a medical and research assistant at the Institute for Sports Medicine at the Westphalian Wilhelms University in Münster . In 1996 he moved to the Department of Sports and Exercise Medicine at the University of Hamburg , where he became deputy head under Klaus-Michael Braumann . In 1998 he was appointed planning officer for the sports science department at the University of Hamburg. In 2000 he was awarded the international science prize ICSSPE at a pre-Olympic congress in Brisbane, Australia . Reer was a member of the founding board of the Faculty of Education, Psychology and Exercise Science at the University of Hamburg and from 2005 to 2010 he was a member of the Faculty Management as a delegate for Exercise Science.

In 2005 Reer was appointed junior professor for clinical performance diagnostics, in 2008 he again took over the position of deputy head of the sports and exercise medicine department at the University of Hamburg, in 2009 Reer became a full professor at the University of Hamburg, and in 2010 he took over the position of deputy spokesman for the department Movement Science from the University of Hamburg. In 2010 Reer became General Secretary of the German Sports Medical Association .

His research focuses on training control and performance diagnostics in swimming (spiroergometry for swimmers in the flow channel to assess swimming economy / technique), options for exercise therapy for illnesses, as well as the development of suitable exercise therapy programs and the measurement of the trainability of proprioceptive abilities and their ability to be influenced by orthotics.

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