India’s orthotics, prosthetics, and rehabilitation sector is one of the largest in the world—defined by enormous clinical demand, wide geographic variation, and a unique blend of public health programs, major NGOs delivering at scale, tertiary hospitals, armed forces rehabilitation, and private clinic networks. Demand is fuelled by rising diabetes and vascular disease, high rates of trauma and road traffic injuries, and a substantial stroke-related disability load—creating sustained need for prosthetic limbs, orthotic bracing, diabetic foot protection/offloading, wheelchairs, and long-term rehabilitation follow-up.
India has one of the world’s largest diabetes populations. The International Diabetes Federation estimates:
Stroke is a major disability driver in India—creating high ongoing need for AFOs/KAFOs, upper-limb supports, mobility aids, and neurorehabilitation. Published evidence commonly reports:
India’s disability prevalence depends heavily on methodology and definitions. Two widely referenced official sources report:
National amputee totals are difficult to “pin down” as a single number, but India’s amputation burden is clearly very large:
India’s delivery model is multi-layered:
A practical “who’s who” list across charitable, government-linked, hospital-based, and private networks:
One of the most globally recognised charitable prosthetic and assistive device models—delivering large-scale access through multi-city branches and outreach.
India’s government enterprise manufacturing a wide range of assistive devices (including orthotic/prosthetic products) and supporting broad distribution through national programs.
A major NGO provider delivering prosthetic limb services through workshops and fitting camps, improving access for underserved communities.
A long-standing rehabilitation organisation with strong assistive technology capability and education/training pathways that help build India’s O&P workforce capacity.
A flagship tertiary institution with structured rehabilitation services and specialist clinics where prosthetists/orthotists support clinical pathways (including orthotic prescription and fitting workflows).
A premium private network providing prosthetics, orthotics, and wheelchair services through clinical centres, supporting higher-end device options and rehabilitation integration.
A prominent specialist centre with rehabilitation services that include orthotics and prosthetics as part of multidisciplinary care.
A key armed forces rehabilitation hub associated with modern protocols (including faster fitting pathways and advanced fabrication capacity).
India’s O&P growth constraints are less about “whether demand exists” and more about system consistency and reach:
India can make major outcomes gains by focusing on prevention + scale + standardisation:
India is a global-scale rehabilitation market: massive need, powerful delivery models (especially NGO and government distribution), and fast-expanding private-sector capability. With 89.8 million adults living with diabetes and substantial stroke/disability burden, the biggest wins will come from preventing avoidable limb loss, standardising quality, expanding follow-up capacity, and accelerating access through scalable digital and outreach models.