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Home Physiotherapy Service Areas

Important: This content does not replace a personal medical assessment. In emergencies, call 112 or go to A&E immediately.

Direct answer

The aim of the services page is not to drown the user in a single general text, but to guide their need to the correct service page. Home physiotherapy, home physiotherapist, post-stroke home physiotherapy, home physiotherapy for the elderly, orthopaedic rehabilitation, neurological rehabilitation, and post-knee or post-hip replacement rehabilitation are all parts of the same service family; however, they are not the same clinical need. It is clear in both WHO Rehabilitation and NICE NG236 Stroke rehabilitation in adults frameworks that rehabilitation should be planned with a focus on the person and function.

Home physiotherapy

This service is the main entry page for users wanting to understand the general home rehabilitation model. The aim here is to explain that topics such as walking, balance, transfers, use of assistive devices, and daily life safety within the home are assessed together. The user is then directed to sub-groups according to their own needs.

Home physiotherapist

This page answers the question "who will assess me, what will they look at?". The user wants to understand not only what the service is, but also who manages the process. Therefore, the role of the physiotherapist should be explained as assessment, goal setting, progress monitoring, and if necessary, referral to a different assessment. WHO Rehabilitation

Post-stroke home physiotherapy

Post-stroke rehabilitation requires structured support in areas such as balance, transfers, walking, upper extremity use, and independence in daily life. The NICE stroke rehabilitation guideline recommends that care should also be organised within the community and that common problems should be systematically assessed. Therefore, this page should be handled as one of the strongest service pages of the site. NICE NG236 Stroke rehabilitation in adults NHS Stroke symptoms / FAST

Home physiotherapy for the elderly

In older individuals, the problem is often not just pain; fear of falling, instability, slowing down, use of assistive devices, and home safety are also part of the process. CDC and NIA data show that falling is common in advanced age and increases the risk of falling again. Therefore, this page should be written within a framework of safety and function. CDC Older Adult Falls NIA Falls and fractures in older adults

Orthopaedic and neurological rehabilitation

Orthopaedic pages highlight range of motion, strength, gait, and return to daily life; neurological pages highlight balance, coordination, transfers, energy management, and participation. Although both are considered under the same roof, they are not the same title. Therefore, the services page should function like a referral center that takes the user to the correct route. WHO Musculoskeletal conditions NICE NG252 Rehabilitation for chronic neurological disorders

Post-replacement pages

Post-knee and hip replacement pages should separately address safe movement, transfers, use of assistive devices, and home function goals after surgery. NICE and APTA/JOSPT sources show that this area should be managed systematically and goal-oriented. NICE NG157 Joint replacement APTA/JOSPT TKA Clinical Practice Guideline Konnyu et al. THA rehabilitation review

Page architecture note

This services page should not behave like a weak catalogue listing service names, but like a content node that correctly classifies patient intent. While directing the user to sub-pages, it should also avoid excessive promises and make the suitability and boundaries of each sub-service visible.

Sources

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