Georgia’s orthotics and prosthetics (O&P) ecosystem is anchored by a handful of established rehabilitation and O&P centres—with services concentrated around Tbilisi and expanding through regional networks. Demand is shaped by a mix of non-communicable disease (NCD) burden (notably diabetes and cardiovascular disease), neurological disability (including stroke), trauma-related mobility impairment, and an ongoing national focus on improving assistive technology (AT) access. International partners have also played a historic role in strengthening physical rehabilitation capacity, while recent initiatives highlight the need to scale availability beyond major cities.
Diabetes is a major driver of lower-limb risk, offloading needs, protective footwear, and—where complications progress—amputation-related prosthetic demand. IDF Europe’s country profile for Georgia (2021) estimates:
Stroke and cardiovascular disease are significant contributors to long-term disability in Georgia, reinforcing demand for AFO/KAFO provision, upper-limb supports, gait rehabilitation, and long-term follow-up. Global stroke burden analysis (IHME/GBD and WHO estimates compiled via Our World in Data) highlights stroke as a major cause of mortality and disability globally, with country-level tracking available for Georgia.
Georgia’s disability statistics (using census/self-reported functional limitations methodologies) indicate a substantial population requiring ongoing rehabilitation and assistive devices. A UN Women Georgia analysis cites 184,958 people with functional disabilities (~5.0% of the population) in 2014.
While consolidated amputee totals are not always publicly reported in one place, Georgia’s service footprint and the strong diabetes burden signal continued need for prosthetic limbs, orthoses, and maintenance/repair services, alongside physiotherapy and community reintegration support.
Georgia’s O&P delivery can be described as provider-limited but capability-developing:
(Tbilisi-led, with varying degrees of fabrication vs. prescription + rehabilitation delivery)
A nationally recognised prosthetic-orthotic provider offering prosthetics and orthotics services, widely referenced as a leading centre in the country.
A multidisciplinary rehabilitation provider with an “Accessibility Lab” that includes selection, manufacture, adjustment and training of orthoses for arms and feet, plus wheelchair and adapted furniture services—supporting paediatric and adult rehabilitation pathways.
Listed locally as delivering orthotics, prosthetics and scoliosis corsetry services (useful as a pathway for bracing and rehabilitation-linked provision).
Shown in international programme listings as operating clinics across multiple Georgian cities (including Tbilisi, Batumi, Kutaisi, Telavi, Zugdidi, Akhaltsikhe), indicating regional reach for assistive services and rehabilitation-linked support.
Georgia’s O&P sector is best viewed as high-need, provider-constrained, and steadily modernising. With diabetes prevalence already significant and stroke/CVD disability burdens sustained, the strongest national gains will come from scaling prevention (especially diabetic foot), expanding regional access and maintenance, and strengthening multidisciplinary rehabilitation pathways that keep patients in follow-up long after initial device delivery.