In a profession often defined by hands-on clinical care and local service delivery, the latest episode of The Prosthetics and Orthotics Podcast challenges practitioners to zoom out. In “Why Global Thinking Matters in Orthotics and Prosthetics,” Hugh Sheridan delivers a candid, wide-ranging discussion on how pricing, policy, and 3D printing are reshaping the O&P landscape from the UK to the Gulf and across Africa.
Far from abstract theory, the conversation tackles real-world pressures clinics face today — from reimbursement constraints to technological disruption — and explores what sustainable care should look like in both high-income and emerging markets.
Sheridan begins with an unconventional entry point into the profession: shoe materials and component distribution. This background, he explains, provided a front-row seat to how materials science, manufacturing logistics, and clinical outcomes are deeply interconnected.
The takeaway for clinicians?
O&P is not just about devices — it is inseparable from supply chains, pricing structures, and technology access.
One of the episode’s most striking themes is the reality of UK reimbursement pressures. Tightening budgets and procurement frameworks have accelerated shifts toward:
Sheridan highlights a difficult truth: innovation is often driven less by excitement and more by economic necessity.
The podcast contrasts two distinct Gulf trajectories:
The discussion frames Saudi Arabia not simply as a large market, but as a system actively redefining its rehabilitation infrastructure.
A particularly important segment addresses pediatric disability care, especially in parts of the Gulf and Africa. Sheridan notes that clinical solutions alone are insufficient when families face:
The emphasis: technology cannot replace trust, education, and culturally sensitive engagement.
Perhaps the most provocative discussion centres on international aid models.
Sheridan challenges a common assumption:
Well-intentioned direct aid can unintentionally undermine local clinics.
When NGOs bypass established providers and deliver devices directly:
The result can be dependency rather than sustainability.
Instead of bypassing clinics, Sheridan proposes a franchise-style aid model:
✔ Partner with local providers
✔ Strengthen clinic capacity
✔ Fund devices through clinics
✔ Build technical and business resilience
This shifts aid from short-term relief to long-term ecosystem development.
The episode also examines the rising influence of China and Turkey in:
These countries are reshaping pricing dynamics and expanding access, particularly in IMEA markets where European imports have historically dominated.
Sheridan advocates strongly for:
For clinics adopting digital manufacturing, this is a strategic warning:
Early decisions on hardware and materials can define long-term profitability and clinical autonomy.
Another nuanced theme explores the psychology and economics behind:
Sheridan notes that resistance to digital production is often less technical and more professional identity-driven — touching on clinician control, craftsmanship traditions, and perceived value.
Digital scanning receives balanced treatment. Rather than positioning it as a replacement for traditional methods, Sheridan emphasises:
✔ Direct scanning
✔ Hybrid analogue–digital workflows
✔ Preserving clinical judgement
✔ Protecting practitioner value
Technology should enhance, not commoditise, the clinician’s role.
Across regions and topics, one message resonates:
Orthotics and prosthetics is no longer a purely local profession.
Pricing policies in the UK, manufacturing shifts in China, privatisation in Saudi Arabia, and aid strategies in Africa are now interconnected forces shaping:
Special thanks to Advanced 3D for sponsoring this episode and supporting forward-looking discussions on digital transformation in O&P.
🎧 Why Global Thinking Matters in Orthotics and Prosthetics with Hugh Sheridan
The Prosthetics and Orthotics Podcast
Listen on Apple Podcasts:
https://podcasts.apple.com/ae/podcast/the-prosthetics-and-orthotics-podcast/id1626621152?i=1000750230992