He spent two days in intensive care and while there, medical staff also found a small stress fracture in his back, ruling him out of all paddling until February at the earliest. He has abandoned plans to spend the festive season in Europe and is heading home to Tauranga to begin treatment.
"I'm currently working on a rehabilitation plan for my back injury which will allow me to break down my technique right to the basics, so I can return to the water in February. We're also working on recruiting a international coach to help with this and contracting them for the next four years, right up until Rio."
Dawson finished 15th in the Olympic semifinals in London, while Jones was 14th. Both now know what they need to do to improve for the next games and the continuity the extra funding ensures is invaluable.
It also means Dawson will not have to push his body to the limits. To fund his London Olympic campaign he won prizemoney at a number of extreme races around the globe in the buildup.
"I guess I won't have to race quite so many extreme races the next time around and still won't compromise my ability to pay for a long overseas campaign, which really should save my body and extend my career.
"In saying that, I love the extreme races so I may not be giving up on them completely!"
Others to benefit from the HPSNZ funding change include teenage golfer Lydia Ko, the 15-year-old world No1 amateur, taekwondo exponent Vaughan Scott, top surfer Paige Hareb and boxer Alexis Pritchard.