Rehabilitative Care

Rehabilitative Care focuses on helping individuals regain, restore, or maintain physical, functional, and cognitive abilities following illness, injury, surgery, or prolonged hospitalisation. It plays a vital role in enabling people to return to their highest possible level of independence, mobility, and confidence.

Rehabilitative care is not just about recovery—it is about reclaiming daily life with dignity, purpose, and hope.

At Age Care Foundation we recognise that recovery is a gradual and highly individual process, especially for older adults and those with complex medical conditions. Our rehabilitative care model is person-centred, goal-oriented, and interdisciplinary, combining medical oversight with therapeutic interventions and emotional encouragement. Our team works closely with patients and families to set realistic goals, track progress, and adapt care plans—ensuring safety, motivation, and continuity at every stage of recovery.

Personalized Therapy Plans

Customized programs designed to meet your specific recovery goals.

Expert Therapists

A dedicated team of licensed therapists committed to your recovery.

Functional Improvement

Focusing on regaining the skills needed for daily independence.

Ongoing Support & Education

Providing guidance and resources to support a long-term recovery.

Supporting Recovery with Compassion At Age Care Foundation, rehabilitative care is guided by empathy, patience, and encouragement. We understand that even small gains can be deeply meaningful, especially for older adults striving to regain independence. Our goal is not only to help individuals recover physical abilities, but to restore confidence, self-worth, and participation in daily life—while supporting families throughout the rehabilitation journey. Because recovery is not just about healing the body—it is about renewing hope and independence, one step at a time.

We've Got Answers

Rehabilitative Care focuses on helping individuals regain, restore, or maintain physical, functional, and cognitive abilities after illness, injury, surgery, or prolonged hospitalisation. Its goal is to improve independence, mobility, and quality of life.

Rehabilitative care is beneficial for:
Older adults experiencing functional decline
Individuals recovering from surgery, stroke, fractures, or serious illness
Patients after prolonged hospital or ICU stays
Persons with mobility, balance, or strength limitations
Individuals needing support to resume daily activities

Rehabilitative care is:
Goal-oriented and recovery-focused
Centred on function, mobility, and independence
Delivered through therapeutic interventions such as physiotherapy
Integrated with medical and nursing care for safe recovery

Sneha Sandhya Age Care Foundation offers:
Functional assessment and personalised care planning
Physiotherapy and mobility rehabilitation
Post-surgical and post-illness rehabilitation
Pain management support
Training in activities of daily living (ADLs)
Cognitive and functional rehabilitation
Home-based rehabilitative care
Integration with geriatric and palliative care services

Yes. Many rehabilitative services, especially physiotherapy and functional training, can be provided at home, allowing patients to recover in a familiar and comfortable environment.

The duration varies depending on the individual’s condition, recovery goals, and progress. Care plans are reviewed regularly and adjusted to meet evolving needs.

Care is delivered by a multidisciplinary team that may include doctors, physiotherapists, nurses, and trained caregivers, working together to support safe and effective recovery.

No. Rehabilitative care is especially important for older adults. Age does not limit the benefits of rehabilitation; therapy is tailored to individual ability, safety, and comfort.

By improving strength, balance, mobility, and confidence, rehabilitative care helps individuals perform daily activities safely and independently, reducing dependence on others.

Yes. Rehabilitation helps:
Reduce the risk of falls
Prevent muscle weakness and deconditioning
Improve mobility and endurance
Support safer long-term functioning

Yes. At Age Care Foundation, rehabilitative care is seamlessly integrated with geriatric care for elders and with palliative care for those with serious illnesses, focusing on comfort, function, and quality of life.

Families should consider rehabilitative care when:
A patient is discharged from hospital or surgery
There is a decline in mobility or daily functioning
Recovery is slow or uncertain
Professional guidance is needed to restore independence safely
Early rehabilitation leads to better outcomes.

The goal is to help individuals recover function, rebuild confidence, and regain independence, while supporting families with compassionate, coordinated care.