Rehabilitation Treatments

Rehabilitation Treatments

Pain and function are two sides of the same problem. Treating the pain matters, but so does restoring what the pain has taken away — movement, independence, and the ability to do the things that matter to you. Whether you are recovering from surgery or injury, living with a neurological condition, or working through long-standing chronic pain, we combine careful assessment, a clear and personalised plan, and targeted treatments to help you regain function and quality of life.

Detailed Assessment

Good rehabilitation begins with a thorough assessment. Before any treatment is recommended, we take the time to understand the full picture — your medical history, the source and pattern of your pain or impairment, how it affects your movement and daily life, and what you most want to get back to. This understanding is what allows us to build a plan that is genuinely tailored to you, rather than a generic program.

Tailored Management Plan

No two people experience pain or recovery the same way, so no two plans should be the same. Following your assessment, we develop a management plan built around your specific condition, your goals, and your circumstances. It may draw on any combination of our pain and rehabilitation services, and it is designed to evolve as you progress — reviewed and adjusted with you over time and kept in step with your GP and treating team.

Outpatient Rehabilitation

Outpatient rehabilitation allows you to work through a structured recovery program while continuing to live at home. It suits people who are managing well day to day but who benefit from regular, supervised therapy to rebuild strength, movement, and function. Sessions are planned around your goals and coordinated with the rest of your care.

Inpatient Rehabilitation

For some people — particularly after major surgery, a significant injury, or a neurological event — a period of inpatient rehabilitation provides the concentrated, supervised support that recovery requires. It brings together medical oversight and a daily therapy program in one place, so progress can be made safely and steadily before returning home.

Chronic Pain Rehabilitation

Living with persistent pain affects movement, sleep, mood, work, and relationships — and these in turn can make the pain harder to manage. Chronic pain rehabilitation takes this whole picture into account, combining physical reconditioning, education about pain and how it works, strategies for pacing and activity, and psychological support, with the goal of reducing the impact of pain and helping you rebuild function and confidence.

Post-Surgical Rehabilitation

Recovery does not end when surgery is finished. The right rehabilitation after an operation can make a substantial difference to how well, and how comfortably, you recover — and to the long-term result. It is tailored to the procedure you have had, combining careful pain management with a graded program to restore movement, strength, and function, alongside your surgeon and care team.

Post-Injury Rehabilitation

An injury — from an accident, a fall, or the demands of work or sport — can leave pain, weakness, or loss of function behind well after the original healing. Post-injury rehabilitation addresses both the immediate consequences of an injury and its longer-term impact, managing pain and progressively restoring strength, movement, and confidence, with the aim of returning you to your usual activities as fully and safely as possible.

Neurorehabilitation

Neurological conditions — including stroke, spinal cord injury, multiple sclerosis, and acquired brain injury — can affect movement, sensation, coordination, and the experience of pain. Neurorehabilitation is the specialised rehabilitation that supports people living with these conditions to maintain and regain function, addressing the particular challenges they present (including spasticity, altered movement, and complex pain), in coordination with your neurologist and care team.

Cancer Rehabilitation

Cancer and its treatment can leave a lasting effect on the body — pain, fatigue, reduced strength and mobility, and nerve-related symptoms among them — both during treatment and well after it has finished. Cancer rehabilitation is supportive care aimed at helping you maintain and recover function and quality of life, managing pain and treatment-related symptoms with a program tailored to where you are in your journey, in coordination with your oncology and treating team.