When ultra-endurance runner Jason Williamson set out to cross Australia — nearly 4,000 km from Perth to Port Macquarie, attempting the equivalent of two marathons a day — the challenge was never going to be just physical. What unfolded became a powerful case study in human performance, injury cascade, psychosocial stressors, logistics, and the realities of medical decision-making under pressure.
In this session, physiotherapist and Extreme Medicine MSc student Victoria (Vikki) Sparkes shares her first-hand perspective supporting Jason through the highs, lows, and critical turning points of the expedition.
From a rapidly developing ankle injury to the compounding effects of dehydration, nutrition deficits, environmental exposure and crew dynamics, Vikki’s account reveals why sustaining performance in extreme conditions requires far more than physical fitness.
She discusses:
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How early decisions shaped the outcome of the challenge
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The real-world complexity of advising an athlete who is determined to continue
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Why injury rarely stays local — and what clinicians must anticipate
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The psychological and interpersonal pressures within small expedition teams
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How risk, identity and motivation influence critical judgment
This is an honest exploration of endurance, resilience, and the difficult conversations that define safe practice in extreme environments. Suitable for medics, expedition leaders, human performance practitioners, physiotherapists, and anyone supporting athletes operating at the edge of human capability.