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Physiotherapy at Home in the UAE: The Licence-First Guide

Home physiotherapy is one of the fastest-growing health services in the UAE, driven by post-surgical patients who cannot easily travel, office workers with stubborn back pain, and a padel injury wave that shows no sign of slowing. It is also a service where the gap between a properly licensed clinician and an enthusiastic amateur with a massage table can be the difference between recovery and real harm. This guide approaches home physio the way a regulator would: who is allowed to treat you, how to check, and what should make you close the door.

in this guide

Why the licence matters more when the clinic comes to youThree regulators, one country: DHA, DoH and MOHAPHow to verify a physiotherapist in five minutesThe company licence nobody asks aboutWhat a properly equipped home physio bringsPost-surgery rehab at home: where protocol meets safetyDesk backs and padel elbows: what home physios treat mostInsurance, referrals and pre-approvals: how the paperwork worksWhat goes wrong when corners are cutWhen home physiotherapy is the wrong settingwhat it costsHow a home visit actually runs, minute by minuteemirate by emirateBefore the first session: an eight-point verification and prep listmistakes to avoidfrequently asked questions

Why the licence matters more when the clinic comes to you

In a hospital or clinic, layers of oversight sit between you and a bad practitioner: a medical director, facility inspections, incident reporting, and colleagues who notice sloppy work. In your living room, all of that disappears. The only safeguard left is the licence itself, which is why home physiotherapy is precisely the setting where verification matters most, not least. A physiotherapist in the UAE is a regulated healthcare professional, in the same legal category as a nurse or radiographer, and treating patients without a valid licence is a criminal matter under the UAE's medical liability framework, not a paperwork technicality.

The confusion arises because the home wellness market blurs lines. Personal trainers, sports massage therapists, yoga instructors and 'recovery specialists' all operate in adjacent space, and some drift into manual therapy, joint mobilisation or electrotherapy that they are neither trained nor permitted to perform. A sports masseur working on a healthy client's tight calves is one thing. The same person manipulating a spine, needling a shoulder or 'rehabbing' a six-week-old knee replacement is another entirely, and the injuries that result, from aggravated disc problems to torn surgical repairs, tend to be expensive and slow to undo.

There is also a liability dimension most patients never consider. Licensed practitioners in the UAE are required to carry medical malpractice insurance under Federal Decree-Law No. 4 of 2016 on Medical Liability. If a licensed physio injures you, there is a legal route to compensation and a regulator to complain to. If an unlicensed one does, you have effectively no recourse: no insurer will pay out for the acts of someone practising illegally, and your own health insurance may query claims arising from unregulated treatment.

Three regulators, one country: DHA, DoH and MOHAP

The UAE does not have a single medical regulator, and this trips people up constantly. Dubai's physiotherapists are licensed by the Dubai Health Authority (DHA) through its Sheryan licensing system. Abu Dhabi, including Al Ain and the Western Region, falls under the Department of Health Abu Dhabi (DoH, formerly known as HAAD). The five northern emirates, Sharjah, Ajman, Umm Al Quwain, Ras Al Khaimah and Fujairah, are regulated by the federal Ministry of Health and Prevention (MOHAP). A licence from one authority does not automatically permit practice in another emirate's jurisdiction, although conversion pathways exist and many established providers hold approvals in more than one.

The practical consequence: if you live in Dubai and a provider sends a physiotherapist who holds only a MOHAP licence, that clinician is, strictly speaking, outside their permitted zone of practice unless the arrangement has been properly structured. Reputable home healthcare companies operating across emirates deal with this by maintaining licensed branches under each authority or restricting which staff serve which areas. It is entirely fair, and normal, to ask which authority licenses the specific physiotherapist coming to your door.

One more wrinkle for Dubai residents: Dubai Healthcare City is a free zone with its own regulatory body, the DHCC regulator, separate from the DHA. A clinician licensed only within that free zone treats patients inside it; home visits across the wider emirate require DHA credentials. Established providers manage all this quietly in the background, but knowing the map helps you ask sharper questions when something feels off.

How to verify a physiotherapist in five minutes

All three regulators run public licence-verification tools, and using them takes less time than reading a page of reviews. For Dubai, the DHA's Sheryan portal lets you search a professional's name and see their licence status, profession and speciality. Abu Dhabi's DoH offers a similar public search for licensed healthcare professionals, and MOHAP maintains a lookup for the northern emirates. You are checking three things: that the licence exists, that it is active rather than expired or suspended, and that the profession listed is actually 'physiotherapist', not 'massage therapist' or an assistant-level title.

Ask the provider for the physiotherapist's full name as it appears on their licence before the visit, not during it. A legitimate operation will send this without hesitation, often alongside the clinician's speciality and years of experience. Hesitation, vagueness, or an offer to send 'certificates' instead of a licence number is a signal worth taking seriously. Paper certificates from overseas universities prove education, not authorisation to practise here.

When you compare home physiotherapy vendors in the tamam app, you are choosing between businesses that have been through onboarding checks, but the final verification habit is still worth keeping for any healthcare service, on any platform, anywhere: name, regulator, status, profession. Five minutes, once, before the first session. After that, rebooking the same verified clinician for a course of sessions is the easy part.

The company licence nobody asks about

Here is the detail that separates people who understand this market from people who do not: an individually licensed physiotherapist cannot legally freelance out of their car. UAE health regulation licenses professionals to practise within a licensed facility, and for home visits that means a company holding a home healthcare licence from the relevant authority. The DHA, DoH and MOHAP each have a specific facility category for home healthcare providers, with requirements covering clinical governance, a medical director, equipment standards, record-keeping and infection control.

This matters because a significant share of the informal market consists of clinic-employed physios doing cash-in-hand evening visits outside their employer's licence. The individual may be perfectly competent, but the arrangement is unauthorised: there is no clinical record of your treatment, no supervising medical director, no facility insurance covering the encounter, and the physio is personally violating the terms of their licence. If they injure you, or simply if your recovery stalls and you need documentation for a surgeon or insurer, the treatment effectively never happened on paper.

So the verification question is two-part: is the person licensed, and is the entity sending them a licensed home healthcare provider? The second is easy to check by asking for the company's facility licence number and confirming the category. Providers operating properly tend to volunteer this, because it is a genuine differentiator against the informal market undercutting them.

What a properly equipped home physio brings

A legitimate home physiotherapy visit does not look like someone arriving with a gym bag and good intentions. Expect a portable treatment table (a folding plinth) for any manual therapy work, since treating on a bed or sofa compromises both technique and the therapist's own back. Alongside it: resistance bands and light weights for exercise therapy, a goniometer for measuring joint range of motion, and often a portable electrotherapy unit such as TENS for pain modulation. Physios treating post-surgical patients may carry a pulse oximeter and will always review your operative notes before touching the limb.

Some modalities travel well; others should raise questions. Therapeutic ultrasound and TENS units are standard portable kit. Dry needling, which has become popular for sports injuries and myofascial pain, is legal in the UAE only when performed by clinicians holding the specific competency recognised by their regulator, so ask directly whether the physio is approved for it rather than assuming the needles in the kit imply permission. Cupping sits under its own regulatory framework as a traditional medicine practice. Anything involving injections is outside a physiotherapist's scope entirely, full stop, and an offer of 'injection therapy' from a home physio is a reason to end the arrangement.

Infection control is the quiet marker of professionalism. Fresh couch roll or linen on the plinth for each patient, hand hygiene before and after contact, wiped-down equipment, and single-use items actually used once. These habits are drilled into clinicians who work within licensed facilities and audited governance systems, and their absence usually means the person in your home has been operating outside one for a while.

Post-surgery rehab at home: where protocol meets safety

Post-operative rehabilitation is where home physiotherapy earns its keep and where the safety stakes are highest. After a knee or hip replacement, ACL reconstruction or rotator cuff repair, the first weeks of rehab follow a protocol set by the operating surgeon: which movements are permitted, which are banned, when weight-bearing progresses, when resistance starts. A good home physio works from that protocol document, communicates with the surgical team, and documents each session so your six-week review is informed by real data rather than your own optimistic recollection.

The danger zone is a therapist who improvises. Pushing knee flexion too aggressively in the early weeks after an ACL graft, loading a repaired rotator cuff before the tendon has anchored, or skipping the boring isometric phase because the patient wants visible progress can compromise the surgery itself. Equally serious is the failure to recognise complications: a post-operative leg that is swelling, hot and disproportionately painful needs a same-day medical review for possible deep vein thrombosis, not a firmer massage. Licensed clinicians are trained to spot these red flags and escalate; that escalation reflex is a large part of what the licence certifies.

For patients discharged from UAE hospitals, ask the surgical team to share the rehab protocol directly with your chosen home provider, and ask the provider to confirm in writing that the assigned physio has post-surgical experience with your specific procedure. Continuity matters here more than anywhere else in this field, which is why booking a course of sessions with the same named clinician, rather than whoever is free that day, should be a condition of the arrangement rather than a hope.

Desk backs and padel elbows: what home physios treat most

Two demand waves dominate the UAE home physio market. The first is occupational: long-hours desk work in Dubai and Abu Dhabi's office corridors produces a steady stream of chronic lower back pain, neck and shoulder tension, and the postural patterns that come from ten hours a day between a laptop and a commute. Home treatment suits this group because the physio can see the actual environment, the dining chair doubling as an office chair, the laptop at lap height, and fix causes rather than just symptoms. Expect an ergonomic review to be part of any competent assessment for desk-related pain.

The second wave is the padel boom. Courts have multiplied across every emirate, and with them a very recognisable injury cluster: lateral elbow tendinopathy from gripping and off-centre strikes, ankle sprains from sharp direction changes, calf and Achilles strains in players returning to sport after sedentary years, and shoulder impingement from repeated overhead smashes. Most of these respond well to structured loading programmes delivered at home, provided the diagnosis is right. Fractures, complete tendon ruptures and mechanically locked joints do not, which is why a physio who examines you and promptly refers you for imaging is demonstrating competence, not failure.

The common thread across both groups is the home exercise programme. Hands-on treatment in the session provides a window of relief; the exercises you do between sessions produce the actual recovery. A physio who leaves you with a written or app-based programme, specific exercises, sets, repetitions, progression criteria, is doing the job properly. One whose plan is simply 'see you Thursday' is selling dependency.

Insurance, referrals and pre-approvals: how the paperwork works

Most UAE health insurance plans cover physiotherapy, but almost none cover it unconditionally. The standard structure is a general practitioner or specialist referral, a diagnosis code, and a pre-approval from the insurer for a set number of sessions, commonly six to twelve per condition per policy year, after which further sessions need fresh justification. Enhanced plans in Dubai and Abu Dhabi are usually straightforward; basic plans may cover physiotherapy only for specific post-surgical or accident-related indications, and some exclude home settings even where clinic treatment is covered.

The home-visit question is the one to settle before booking anything. Ask your insurer, in writing, whether physiotherapy delivered at home by a licensed home healthcare provider is claimable, and whether the provider must be within the insurer's network for direct billing. Out-of-network treatment often shifts you to pay-and-claim: you pay the provider, then submit the invoice, clinical report and referral for reimbursement at the insurer's rates, which may not match what you paid. A licensed provider can supply properly coded invoices and clinical documentation; an informal one cannot, which quietly converts their apparent cheapness into a full out-of-pocket cost.

In Abu Dhabi, Thiqa cardholders and Daman members should check network status specifically, as home healthcare networks are narrower than clinic networks. Across all emirates, keep the referral letter, pre-approval reference and session invoices together. Insurers reject physiotherapy claims for missing paperwork more often than for medical reasons, and reconstructing documents months later is far harder than filing them as you go.

What goes wrong when corners are cut

The failure cases in this market are consistent enough to list. The first is misdiagnosis by omission: back pain treated for weeks as muscular when it was a disc compressing a nerve, a 'sprain' that was an undisplaced fracture, shoulder pain that was referred from the neck. Licensed physiotherapists are trained in differential screening precisely so they know what is not theirs to treat; the informal market's defining trait is that everything looks treatable to someone whose income depends on the next session.

The second is overtreatment injury. Aggressive manipulation of an inflamed joint, deep tissue work over an acute injury, electrotherapy applied over contraindicated areas, or exercise loading that outruns tissue healing. These injuries are underreported because embarrassed patients rarely complain, and because complaining about an unlicensed practitioner means admitting to the arrangement. With a licensed clinician, formal complaint channels exist through the DHA, DoH or MOHAP, and regulators do act on them.

The third failure is financial rather than physical: prepaid packages sold hard in the first session, ten or twenty sessions bought at a discount from a provider who then becomes difficult to schedule, or a 'therapist' who disappears entirely. Reasonable package pricing exists and is legitimate, but it should follow an honest assessment of how many sessions your condition actually needs, not precede it. When a course of treatment is genuinely warranted, booking it through a platform such as tamam, where payment and scheduling are tracked in-app, at least removes the vanishing-vendor risk.

When home physiotherapy is the wrong setting

Home physio has real limits, and a trustworthy provider names them upfront. See a doctor first, not a physiotherapist, if you have back pain with numbness in the groin or difficulty controlling bladder or bowel (a possible surgical emergency), unexplained weight loss or night pain that wakes you, pain following significant trauma such as a fall or road accident, a hot swollen joint with fever, or calf pain with swelling after surgery or a long flight. These presentations need medical assessment and often imaging before anyone applies hands-on treatment.

Some rehabilitation also simply needs clinic infrastructure. Late-stage ACL rehab benefits from force plates, isokinetic testing and open gym space; complex neurological rehabilitation may need parallel bars, tilt tables or hydrotherapy; and certain cardiac and pulmonary rehab programmes require monitoring equipment no one carries in a car. The honest pattern for many patients is hybrid: home sessions in the early, low-mobility phase, transitioning to a clinic or gym-based programme as function returns. A physio who recommends transitioning you out of home care at the right moment is acting in your interest.

None of this diminishes what home treatment does well, which is early post-operative care, pain management for people who struggle to travel, elderly patients for whom a clinic trip is itself a fall risk, and the enormous middle ground of musculoskeletal complaints that need assessment, manual therapy and a supervised exercise programme. The point of the safety lens is not fear; it is that the same market that contains excellent DHA and DoH licensed clinicians doing hospital-grade work in living rooms also contains people who should not be touching a post-surgical knee, and the licence is how you tell them apart.

what it costs

Home physiotherapy in the UAE generally runs between AED 250 and AED 600 per session, with the spread explained by clinician seniority, speciality, session length, travel distance and whether specialist modalities are included. Initial assessments price above follow-ups because they take longer and include the examination and treatment plan. The figures below reflect typical market ranges across the emirates.

jobtypical range
Initial assessment + first treatment (60–75 min)AED 300–600
Standard follow-up session (45–60 min)AED 250–450
Post-surgical rehabilitation sessionAED 350–600
Sports injury rehab session (padel, running, gym)AED 300–550
Paediatric or geriatric specialist sessionAED 350–600
Dry needling or kinesio taping add-onAED 50–150
Ten-session package (total, paid upfront)AED 2,500–5,000
Late-evening or remote-area travel surchargeAED 50–150

Treat these as orientation, not quotes: final pricing comes from comparing the actual vendor quotes shown for your area and case in the tamam app.

How a home visit actually runs, minute by minute

A first appointment runs longer than follow-ups, typically 60 to 75 minutes, because it opens with a subjective history and physical assessment before any treatment: your symptoms, surgical notes or scans if you have them, medication, red-flag screening, then movement testing and measurement. Follow-up sessions usually run 45 to 60 minutes. The physio arrives with a folding treatment table, bands, and whatever modalities your plan calls for, and needs roughly a two-by-three-metre clear floor space, ideally not carpeted so deeply that the plinth rocks. A living room corner works; a cluttered bedroom does not.

Your preparation is modest but real. Wear clothing that exposes the treated area, shorts for a knee, a vest top for a shoulder. Have your referral letter, operative notes, imaging reports and insurance pre-approval to hand at the first session. Sort building access in advance: register the visitor with reception if your tower requires it, and tell the provider where to park, since a physio carrying a plinth cannot circle the block. Keep pets in another room and, for children's sessions, plan for a parent to be present throughout, which good providers require anyway.

Booking through tamam keeps the logistics in one place: you compare verified vendors with transparent AED ranges, coordinate arrival details over WhatsApp if the building needs instructions, pay in-app, and, crucially for rehab, rebook the same physiotherapist for the rest of the course so your programme stays with one clinician rather than restarting with a stranger each week.

how it plays out emirate by emirate

dubai

Dubai's home physios are DHA-licensed, verifiable through the Sheryan portal, and the emirate has the country's deepest bench of home healthcare companies, so same-week availability is realistic for most areas. Note the Dubai Healthcare City wrinkle: clinicians licensed only under the free zone's own regulator need DHA credentials for home visits elsewhere in the emirate. Tower living shapes the visit itself: Marina, Downtown and JLT buildings typically require the physio to register at reception with Emirates ID, and some ask providers for advance visitor approval, so share your building's procedure when booking. Demand skews heavily toward desk-related back pain and padel injuries, and evening slots book out fastest.

abu dhabi

Abu Dhabi falls under the Department of Health (DoH), which runs its own professional licence search and sets specific standards for home healthcare providers. Insurance is the local complication: Thiqa and Daman home-care networks are narrower than their clinic networks, so confirm direct billing before assuming your plan applies at home. The island's apartment towers are straightforward for access, while Khalifa City, Al Raha and Mohammed Bin Zayed City villas give physios easy parking and space to work. Al Ain deserves planning ahead: it has a large villa population and genuine demand, but fewer resident home-physio teams, so providers often schedule Al Ain visits on fixed days with less flexibility.

sharjah

Sharjah's clinicians are licensed federally through MOHAP, and the emirate's home physio demand has a distinctive profile: a large population commuting daily to Dubai, which produces exactly the prolonged-sitting back and neck complaints that respond well to home treatment plus an ergonomic review. Family villa districts such as Muwaileh and Al Rahmaniya are well served, and requests for same-gender therapists are common and routinely accommodated here; state the preference at booking rather than at the door. Buildings in Al Nahda and Al Majaz along the Dubai border are dense apartment stock where parking is the physio's main logistical problem, so a paid-parking arrangement or visitor slot is worth sorting in advance.

ajman

Ajman sits under MOHAP licensing, and its home physio market is served partly by local providers and partly by teams travelling from Sharjah and Dubai, which makes two questions essential at booking: whether a travel surcharge applies, and which authority licenses the visiting clinician. The Corniche towers and Al Nuaimiya's dense apartment blocks host most demand, while Al Zahya and the newer villa communities are growing quickly. Because the provider pool is smaller than Dubai's, the same-clinician continuity that post-surgical rehab depends on is actually easier to secure here once you find a good physio; lock in a recurring slot early rather than rebooking week to week.

ras al khaimah

Ras Al Khaimah's MOHAP-licensed market is small but growing with the emirate's residential push around Al Hamra, Mina Al Arab and Al Marjan Island. RAK has a genuinely distinctive injury profile: Jebel Jais hiking, the via ferrata and the zipline feed a steady trickle of ankle, knee and shoulder complaints from weekend adventurers, alongside the usual desk and padel cases. Home-physio coverage concentrates along the coastal strip, and residents further inland toward Al Dhait or the old town should expect narrower scheduling windows. Weekend availability is tighter than in Dubai, so post-surgical patients needing fixed-frequency sessions should book the full course upfront.

fujairah

Fujairah, on the east coast under MOHAP regulation, has the thinnest resident home-physio pool in the country, and several providers serve it on scheduled east-coast days rather than on demand, so flexibility on timing gets you seen sooner. Housing is a mix of Corniche-area apartments with simple access and inland villas around Al Faseel and Merashid where parking is never a problem. The local demand mix leans toward workplace injuries from the port, industrial and quarrying sectors alongside standard musculoskeletal complaints, and diving-related shoulder and back strains appear more here than anywhere else in the UAE. Verify MOHAP licences with extra care, since the informal market fills gaps where formal supply is scarce.

umm al quwain

Home physio in Umm Al Quwain leans elderly and post-surgical: knee and hip rehab after procedures in Sharjah or Dubai hospitals, balance work for older residents in villa households, and back programmes for the E611 commuter set. Physios travel on Sharjah–Ajman rosters, so block-book a twice-weekly series instead of chasing single sessions — continuity with one licensed therapist is the whole game in rehab. Confirm travel is included in the session fee and ask for a written home-exercise plan.

Before the first session: an eight-point verification and prep list

  • Get the physiotherapist's full name and licence number, and verify it on the DHA Sheryan, DoH or MOHAP public register: active status, profession listed as physiotherapist.
  • Ask which company holds the home healthcare facility licence, and note its number.
  • Obtain a doctor's referral and insurance pre-approval first if you intend to claim, and confirm in writing that home visits are covered.
  • Send the provider your surgical notes, imaging reports or referral letter ahead of the assessment.
  • Confirm the session length, the full price range including any travel surcharge, and whether the same clinician will handle the whole course.
  • Sort building access: register the visitor with reception, and tell the provider where to park.
  • Clear a two-by-three-metre floor space and plan clothing that exposes the treatment area.
  • After the first session, ask for the written assessment findings and the home exercise programme, and check that session notes will be available if your surgeon or insurer asks.

mistakes to avoid

Verifying the person but not the company

A valid individual licence does not authorise freelance home visits; the visit must run through a licensed home healthcare provider. Skipping this check is how people end up with undocumented treatment that insurers will not touch and regulators cannot trace. Ask for both licences, every time.

Buying a large package at the first session

Prepaying twenty sessions before anyone has properly assessed you inverts the clinical logic: the treatment plan should determine the session count, not the sales target. Reasonable packages exist, but commit only after the assessment, and prefer arrangements where payment and scheduling are tracked rather than handed over in cash.

Treating red-flag symptoms as physio problems

Back pain with groin numbness or bladder changes, night pain with weight loss, post-surgical calf swelling and heat, or a hot joint with fever all need a doctor before a physiotherapist. A licensed clinician will screen and refer you on; the mistake is delaying that medical review by shopping for stronger massage instead.

Ignoring the home exercise programme

Hands-on treatment gives a window of relief; the exercises between sessions do the actual rehabilitation. Patients who skip the programme and rebook the pleasant parts spend more and recover slower. If you were not given a written programme with specific exercises and progressions, ask why.

Switching clinicians every session to chase availability

Rehabilitation compounds when one physio tracks your progress against a plan, particularly after surgery. Taking whichever therapist is free each week resets that continuity and invites contradictory advice. Book the course with a named clinician, and use same-vendor rebooking to keep it that way.

Sorting insurance paperwork after treatment instead of before

Insurers reject physiotherapy claims for missing referrals and absent pre-approvals more than for any clinical reason. Reconstructing a referral chain months later, for treatment already delivered, rarely succeeds. Get the referral, the pre-approval reference and properly coded invoices as you go, and keep them together.

frequently asked questions

How do I check whether a physiotherapist is genuinely licensed in the UAE?

Ask for the clinician's full name and licence number, then check it on the public register of the relevant regulator: the DHA's Sheryan portal for Dubai, the DoH professional search for Abu Dhabi and Al Ain, or MOHAP's lookup for the northern emirates. Confirm the licence is active and the listed profession is 'physiotherapist', not a massage or assistant title. A legitimate provider will send these details before the visit without being chased.

Do I need a doctor's referral before booking home physiotherapy?

You can legally book a physiotherapy assessment directly, and physios are trained to screen for problems that need a doctor first. However, if you want insurance to pay, most UAE plans require a GP or specialist referral with a diagnosis plus a pre-approval before sessions start. Getting the referral first is almost always the cheaper sequence.

Will my insurance cover physiotherapy at home rather than in a clinic?

Sometimes, and the only reliable answer comes from your insurer in writing. Many enhanced plans cover home physiotherapy through network home healthcare providers with pre-approval; some basic plans cover physiotherapy only in clinics or only for post-surgical and accident cases. Also ask whether direct billing applies or whether you must pay and claim back.

How many sessions will I actually need?

A straightforward muscular back episode often improves meaningfully within four to six sessions alongside a home exercise programme, while post-surgical rehab commonly runs eight to twenty sessions over several months depending on the procedure. Be wary of anyone quoting a large fixed number before examining you. Insurers typically pre-approve six to twelve sessions at a time, which is a reasonable natural checkpoint for reassessment.

Is home physiotherapy as effective as going to a clinic?

For assessment, manual therapy, early post-operative rehab and supervised exercise programmes, home treatment by a licensed physio is clinically equivalent, and seeing your real desk setup or stairs can make it better. Clinics win when rehab needs equipment: isokinetic testing, hydrotherapy, parallel bars or late-stage sports conditioning. Many recoveries sensibly start at home and finish in a gym or clinic.

Can a home physio legally do dry needling?

Only if their regulator has recognised that specific competency, which requires additional certification beyond the base physiotherapy licence. Ask directly whether the clinician is approved for dry needling under their DHA, DoH or MOHAP licence rather than assuming the equipment implies permission. Anything involving injections is outside physiotherapy scope entirely and should end the conversation.

How soon after surgery can home physiotherapy start?

That is the surgeon's call, written into your discharge plan, and for joint replacements it is often within days of leaving hospital because early mobilisation is part of the protocol. The home physio should work from the surgeon's rehab protocol document, not improvise. Ask the provider to confirm the assigned clinician has experience with your specific procedure.

Can I request a female physiotherapist?

Yes, and it is a routine request across the UAE, particularly in Sharjah and the northern emirates. State the preference at booking rather than when the clinician arrives, since rosters are assigned in advance. Most established home healthcare providers employ both male and female physios for exactly this reason.

What should I do if pain gets worse after a session?

Mild post-treatment soreness for 24 to 48 hours is common and normal, especially after a first session or new exercises. Sharp worsening pain, new numbness or tingling, significant swelling, or any change in bladder or bowel control is not: contact the physio immediately and see a doctor the same day for the neurological signs. A licensed clinician will want to know and will adjust or escalate; that responsiveness is part of what you are paying for.

What equipment does the physio bring, and what do I need to provide?

The clinician brings the treatment table, resistance bands, measurement tools and any electrotherapy units your plan calls for; you provide a clear two-by-three-metre floor space, suitable clothing and your medical paperwork. You do not need to buy equipment upfront. If your home exercise programme later needs bands or light weights, they cost little and your physio will specify exactly which.

Why do prices vary so much between providers for the same session?

Seniority and speciality drive most of it: a physio with a decade of post-surgical or sports rehab experience prices above a recent licensee, and specialist paediatric or neuro sessions cost more than general musculoskeletal work. Travel distance, session length and add-ons like needling account for the rest. Comparing several vendors' AED ranges side by side in the tamam app makes the trade-offs visible before you commit.

Is it safe to book a physio who messages me privately offering a cheaper cash rate?

It is legal risk dressed as a discount. A clinician working outside a licensed home healthcare company generates no clinical records, is not covered by facility malpractice arrangements, and is breaching their own licence conditions. You also lose any insurance claim path and any complaint route to the regulator. The saving is rarely more than the cost of one wasted session.

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