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Expert Geriatric Physiotherapist Delivering Personalized Patient Care
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Physiotherapist
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Experience: 5+ Years of Experience
Gender: Female
Location: Delhi
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Experience: 8+ Years of Experience
Gender: Male
Location: Delhi
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Experience: 5+ Years of Experience
Gender: Male
Location: Delhi
Physiotherapist
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Experience: 6+ Years of Experience
Gender: Male
Location: Dehradun
Physiotherapist
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Experience: 4+ Years of Experience
Gender: Male
Location:
Physiotherapist
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Experience: 3+ years of experience
Gender: Male
Location: Delhi
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Experience: 2+ Years of Experience
Gender: Male
Location: Meerut
Physiotherapist
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Experience: 15+ Years of Experience
Gender: Male
Location: Nagpur
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Experience: 3+ years of experience
Gender: Female
Location: Nagpur
Physiotherapist
Physiotherapy & Rehabilitation
Experience: 1 year
Gender: Female
Location: Nagpur
Age-related changes in strength, balance, mobility, and physical endurance can affect movement confidence and the ability to perform daily activities. Recovery after illness, injury, surgery, or prolonged inactivity may also create physical challenges that require structured rehabilitation support.
At MAX@Home, geriatric physiotherapists provide specialised physiotherapy for older adults in clinical settings. They support individuals experiencing mobility limitations, balance concerns, joint stiffness, or recovery needs through personalised treatment plans tailored to their physical condition and rehabilitation goals. This approach aims to support safe movement, physical function, and confidence in everyday activities.
A geriatric physiotherapist is a professional who specialises in supporting older adults with age-related physical concerns that may affect mobility, balance, strength, coordination, and overall physical function.
They work with individuals experiencing movement limitations, joint stiffness, muscle weakness, balance concerns, or recovery needs following illness, injury, surgery, or prolonged inactivity. Geriatric physiotherapists may also support patients managing musculoskeletal or neurological conditions that affect safe and independent movement.
The role of a geriatric physiotherapist is to assess physical limitations that may affect movement and everyday function in older adults. Their responsibilities include:
Assessment of mobility, balance, posture, and strength to identify physical challenges affecting movement and daily function.
Evaluation of walking ability and coordination to understand concerns related to balance and movement safety.
Identification of functional limitations affecting routine activities such as walking, standing, climbing stairs, or changing positions.
Development of personalised rehabilitation goals according to the patient’s physical condition and mobility requirements.
Monitoring progress and modifying rehabilitation plans based on recovery and functional needs.
Guiding safe movement and fall prevention to support confidence during daily activities.
A geriatric physiotherapist helps manage age-related and mobility-related conditions affecting movement and physical function in older adults. These may include:
Arthritis:joint pain, stiffness, and reduced mobility associated with age-related wear and tear or inflammatory joint conditions.
Osteoporosis: movement limitations and rehabilitation support for individuals with reduced bone strength or fracture risk.
Post-Fracture Rehabilitation: recovery support following fractures, including hip, wrist, or spinal fractures, commonly affecting older adults.
Recovery After Joint Replacement Surgery: physiotherapy support following hip, knee, or other orthopaedic procedures.
Balance Disorders and Fall-Related Concerns: conditions affecting stability, coordination, and walking confidence.
Age-Related Muscle Weakness and Reduced Mobility: physical decline affecting movement, endurance, and functional ability.
Stroke-Related Mobility Concerns: support for movement, balance, and coordination following stroke recovery.
Parkinson’s Disease-Related Movement Difficulties: physiotherapy support for gait, balance, posture, and movement control.
Post-Hospitalisation Weakness and Physical Deconditioning: reduced physical function following illness, surgery, or prolonged inactivity.
Chronic Neck, Back, or Joint Pain:
persistent discomfort affecting movement and daily activities.Geriatric physiotherapists use structured, evidence-based treatment approaches tailored to age-related physical changes, mobility limitations, and rehabilitation needs. Care is focused on improving movement quality, physical function, and safety in daily activities.
Gentle manual therapy and controlled joint mobilisation techniques may be used to improve joint movement and reduce stiffness associated with ageing, arthritis, or reduced activity levels. Therapeutic stretching may be included to support flexibility and joint range of motion.
Age-appropriate exercises may be prescribed to improve muscle strength, flexibility, and physical endurance. This may include sit-to-stand exercises, resistance band training, assisted squats, calf raises, range-of-motion exercises, and balance-focused drills, along with light walking-based endurance activity where appropriate.
Clinically appropriate pain relief modalities and safe electrotherapy may be used to support management of chronic pain, muscle tightness, or joint discomfort. These are selected based on clinical assessment, tolerance, and patient-specific needs.
Postural training and ergonomic advice may be provided to reduce strain during sitting, standing, and routine movements. This helps improve alignment and supports safer movement patterns in daily life.
Structured gait and balance training may be used to improve walking ability, coordination, and stability. Functional rehabilitation focuses on supporting safe performance of daily activities and improving movement confidence.
You may consider consulting a geriatric physiotherapist if you experience:
Difficulty walking or maintaining balance affecting confidence during movement.
Frequent falls or fear of falling during routine daily activities.
Reduced strength or mobility making movement more challenging.
Joint pain or stiffness affecting physical function and comfort.
Recovery after surgery, fracture, or hospitalisation requiring structured rehabilitation support.
Difficulty performing routine daily activities such as standing, climbing stairs, or changing positions.
Reduced confidence during movement due to weakness, balance concerns, or mobility limitations.
Consulting a geriatric physiotherapist supports older adults in managing physical limitations affecting movement, balance, and daily activities. Potential benefits include:
Supports safer movement and mobility during routine daily activities.
Helps improve strength and physical stability to support movement confidence.
Supports balance and walking confidence through structured rehabilitation.
Promotes greater independence in daily activities by addressing physical limitations affecting movement.
Helps reduce the risk of falls by improving balance, coordination, and movement safety.
Benefits may vary depending on the patient’s condition, physical requirements, and rehabilitation goals.
Older adults may experience physical concerns affecting movement, mobility, balance, endurance, or recovery needs. Depending on the patient’s condition, geriatric care may involve physiotherapists with expertise in different areas of rehabilitation.
Orthopaedic physiotherapists support older adults experiencing musculoskeletal concerns affecting bones, joints, muscles, and physical movement. They may help manage arthritis, osteoporosis, fractures, joint stiffness, and rehabilitation following orthopaedic procedures such as hip or knee replacement surgery.
Neuro physiotherapists support movement and coordination concerns associated with neurological conditions affecting older adults. They may assist individuals experiencing mobility challenges related to stroke, Parkinson’s disease, balance difficulties, or reduced coordination.
Cardio-respiratory physiotherapists support older adults experiencing reduced physical endurance or movement limitations associated with heart or respiratory concerns. Their approach may focus on improving physical conditioning, endurance, and activity tolerance.
Manual therapists use hands-on physiotherapy techniques to support joint mobility, movement, and physical comfort. They may help older adults experiencing joint stiffness, movement restriction, or musculoskeletal discomfort affecting physical function.
MAX@Home provides geriatric physiotherapy in clinical settings through structured, individualised rehabilitation plans designed around the specific needs of older adults. Care is guided by clinical assessment and focused on supporting safe movement and functional ability. Patients may benefit from:
Clinical setting-based physiotherapy care: Structured assessment and treatment in a supervised clinical environment.
Personalised rehabilitation planning: Treatment plans tailored to the patient’s condition, mobility level, and recovery needs.
Evidence-based physiotherapy approach: Interventions selected based on clinical need and established physiotherapy practices.
Multidisciplinary physiotherapy support: Access to experienced geriatric physiotherapists along with specialists such as orthopaedic, neuro, sports, and manual physiotherapists, depending on clinical requirements.
Structured progress monitoring: Regular review of recovery and functional improvement to guide ongoing care.
Booking a geriatric physiotherapist at MAX@Home is simple and can be done through the official website or helpline. Patients can request a clinical consultation based on their mobility concerns, recovery needs, or age-related physical limitations. To book a consultation:
Visit the MAX@Home website and select geriatric physiotherapy services
Call 9240299624 to enquire and schedule an appointment
Share relevant details about the patient’s condition or mobility concerns
Choose a suitable time slot for a clinical consultation
MAX@Home ensures that patients are guided through a structured booking process to connect them with appropriate physiotherapy support based on clinical requirements.
A geriatric physiotherapist assesses and manages age-related physical conditions that affect movement, balance, strength, and mobility. They support older adults in improving physical function and managing limitations that impact daily activities.
Older adults experiencing difficulty with walking, balance issues, reduced strength, joint stiffness, or recovery needs after illness, surgery, or hospitalisation may benefit from consulting a geriatric physiotherapist.
They manage conditions such as arthritis, osteoporosis, post-fracture recovery, joint replacement rehabilitation, stroke-related mobility issues, Parkinson’s disease, balance disorders, and age-related muscle weakness.
Geriatric physiotherapy uses structured rehabilitation approaches to support walking ability, improve balance, enhance strength, and improve coordination for safer movement during daily activities.
No. It supports older adults at all mobility levels, including those who are active but experiencing pain, stiffness, balance issues, or early signs of physical decline.
The duration varies depending on the condition, severity, and overall health of the patient. Progress is gradual and monitored through regular clinical assessments.
You can book a geriatric physiotherapist at MAX@Home through the website or call 9240299624 to schedule a clinical consultation based on your location and requirements.
No, geriatric physiotherapy is not painful. Treatment is designed to be safe and well-tolerated, with techniques and exercises adjusted according to the patient’s comfort level, physical condition, and clinical needs.