Azerbaijan’s orthotics and prosthetics (O&P) ecosystem is anchored in a combination of government health services, military/veteran care pathways, and an expanding private rehabilitation sector. Demand for O&P services is driven by non-communicable diseases (especially diabetes and cardiovascular disorders), stroke-related disability, traumatic injuries, and an evolving focus on enhancing access to assistive technologies for persons with disability.
While systematic national reporting on exact service utilisation is limited, independent analyses and public health data confirm sustained demand for prosthetic limbs, orthotic bracing, diabetic foot management, mobility aids, and rehabilitation follow-up services.
Diabetes is a major non-communicable disease and an important long-term driver of prosthetic and orthotic demand in Azerbaijan. According to the International Diabetes Federation (IDF):
Diabetes increases the risk for diabetic foot ulcers, lower-limb complications, and amputation risk, contributing to longer-term need for protective orthoses, custom footwear, and prosthetic solutions.
Stroke and cardiovascular diseases are significant contributors to disability in Azerbaijan. According to WHO and national health reporting:
Stroke survivors frequently require ankle–foot orthoses (AFOs), upper-limb supports, gait training, and long-term rehabilitation, positioning O&P services as essential components of national rehabilitation strategies.
Azerbaijan’s national disability statistics suggest a significant segment of the population live with long-term impairments and functional limitations requiring assistive devices, including prosthetic and orthotic care.
National registry data and census-based reporting identify:
Official national data do not consolidate a single amputee total. However, clinical reporting and rehabilitative demand signal sustained need for prosthetic limbs and orthotic bracing—especially amongst:
This demand is manifested through both public hospital referrals and private clinic service volumes.
Azerbaijan’s O&P delivery system combines public services and growing private sector participation:
Despite these elements, there remains a need to strengthen regional access, expand technological adoption, and improve data collection to quantify national service utilisation more comprehensively.
A principal public institution providing orthopaedic and rehabilitation services, including prosthetic fitting, orthotic bracing, clinical evaluation, and long-term follow-up. This centre serves as a referral hub for complex cases from across the country.
Integrated O&P and rehabilitation services supporting veterans, service personnel, and conflict-related injury care pathways. These programs often collaborate with public hospitals for comprehensive device provision and therapy.
A growing number of private clinics provide O&P services, rehabilitation, and assistive technology support, including:
Some private and NGO-linked centres provide broader mobility support, including wheelchair distribution, seating solutions, and orthotic support as part of multi-disciplinary rehabilitation programmes.
Developing community-level screening, podiatry services, protective footwear, and early orthotic offloading to reduce amputations.
Introducing digital scanning, CAD/CAM design, and modern fabrication to improve fit, turnaround times, and patient outcomes.
Expanding clinical and technical training pathways for orthotists, prosthetists, and rehabilitation therapists.
Establishing outreach fitting and repair clinics linked to central providers to improve equity of access and continuity.
Strengthening coordination between acute care, orthotics/prosthetics, physiotherapy, and community follow-up to improve long-term outcomes.
Azerbaijan’s O&P sector sits at an emerging stage of structured development: a combination of government, military, and private pathways provide a framework for rehabilitation services, while evolving NCD burdens highlight the importance of scaling access, enhancing data systems, and building multidisciplinary pathways. Success in expanding modern O&P delivery across regions—and strengthening prevention, continuity, and technology adoption—will be central to improving outcomes for people living with limb loss, disability, and mobility impairment.