Dr Teddy Wu completed his medical training from the University of Auckland in 2004. He then qualified as a specialist Neurologist in 2014 after spending time in Auckland and Christchurch during his training. He then completed a 3-year advanced clinical and academic fellowship in Melbourne at the Royal Melbourne Hospital as a stroke sub-specialist, and was awarded a PhD in stroke medicine from the University of Melbourne. He returned to New Zealand in 2017 and has been practising as a specialist Neurologist in the Department of Neurology at Christchurch Hospital since. Teddy is an expert in general neurology and manages patients with headache, epilepsy, Parkinson's disease, cognitive neurology, peripheral neuropathy, cerebrovascular disease and demyelinating disorders such as multiple sclerosis. Teddy has a subspecialist interest in cerebrovascular disease / stroke, and has an academic interest with more than 100 publications in peer review journals.
Teddy is also an ACC contracted provider and accepts referrals from an ACC case manager.
Dr James Beharry is a neurologist with subspecialty training in stroke, neuroimmunology and neurophysiology. He graduated from the University of Auckland Medical school in 2013 and completed his initial neurology training at Christchurch Public Hospital. He completed a stroke fellowship at the Royal Melbourne Hospital, followed by further fellowship training in neurophysiology and neuroimmunology (multiple sclerosis, myasthenia gravis and other neuroinflammatory disorders) at the Austin Hospital in Melbourne. James has additional special interests in headache disorders and neuromuscular neurology. He also holds a consultant neurologist position at Christchurch Hospital and is actively involved in academic research.
Dr Duncan Wilson completed his medical training at the University of Otago in 2005. Following his initial training, he furthered his expertise in neurology with advanced training across multiple institutions in the UK, New Zealand-and Australia, including Christchurch Hospital, St Mary's Hospital, London and Westmead Hospital, Sydney Australia. Duncan was awarded the MRCP in 2011 and completed his PhD in neurology at University College London in 2018 and a Movement Disorder Fellowship in 2025.
Duncan's clinical and research expertise spans a broad range of`neurological conditions, with a particular focus on Movement Disorders including Parkinson's disease, Dystonia, and related conditions. His academic contributions include over 100 publications in peer reviewed journals focusing on intracerebral haemorrhage, cerebral small vessel disease, and stroke management.



