Ethiopia’s orthotics, prosthetics, and physical rehabilitation sector is shaped by a unique combination of scale (one of Africa’s largest populations), a significant burden of injury and mobility impairment, and a steadily rising load of non-communicable diseases (NCDs)—particularly diabetes and stroke. The result is strong and sustained need for prosthetic limbs, orthotic bracing (especially lower-limb), diabetic foot protection/offloading, mobility aids, physiotherapy, and long-term repairs.
As with other “rebuilding a system” stories across IMEA CPO, the central challenge is not only producing devices—but strengthening the full rehabilitation pathway: referral, assessment, fabrication, fitting, therapy, follow-up, and maintenance—so outcomes remain consistent beyond the initial fitting.
Diabetes is an increasingly important driver of diabetic foot ulcers, infection risk, and preventable amputations, increasing demand for protective footwear, custom foot orthoses/offloading, and early intervention pathways. The International Diabetes Federation (IDF) estimates for Ethiopia (2024):
Stroke contributes heavily to disability needs requiring AFOs/KAFOs, mobility aids, upper-limb supports, and long-term neurorehabilitation. Recent Ethiopia-focused clinical literature (WHO-referenced) reports:
Disability prevalence estimates vary widely by methodology. Two frequently cited figures include:
A single “national amputee total” is not consistently published in a way that is comparable year-to-year. However, Ethiopia’s demand for prosthetic services is strongly linked to trauma, infection/vascular disease (including diabetes), and conflict-related injuries, with a significant share of service delivery occurring through physical rehabilitation centres supported by humanitarian partners.
Ethiopia’s service landscape is best understood as a mix of:
ICRC reporting from its physical rehabilitation programme describes support to centres in locations including Arba Minch, Assela, Bahir Dar, Dessie, Dire Dawa, Mekele, Menegesha, and the establishment/expansion of centres such as Assosa, Gambella, and Nekemte—illustrating a national network approach rather than a single-site model.
A practical list of visible service anchors shaping national delivery:
A long-standing national provider focused on prosthetics and orthotics services and patient care, widely referenced as a key access point in the capital.
One of Ethiopia’s best-known disability and rehabilitation NGOs, operating centres with prosthetic/orthotic workshops and a wider set of rehabilitation services and mobility aids production.
A core backbone of Ethiopia’s O&P ecosystem, supporting device provision and physiotherapy in multiple regions through long-term programming and partnerships with local authorities and NGOs.
While not a “service provider” in the classic clinic sense, Ethiopia’s system strength is tightly linked to training; ICRC coverage highlights structured education aimed at building national rehabilitation expertise.
Ethiopia is a high-impact rehabilitation market where strengthening orthotics and prosthetics has immediate benefits for mobility, independence, and participation. With diabetes prevalence at 4.4% (adults 20–79) and stroke mortality/disability pressures, the biggest national wins come from prevention (diabetic foot), resilient regional service coverage, and strong repair/follow-up capacity—built on the country’s existing network of rehabilitation centres and long-standing providers.