Nepal’s (POP: 30m) orthotics, prosthetics, and rehabilitation sector plays a vital role in restoring mobility across a country where geography, transport, and affordability can strongly determine access to care. Demand is driven by trauma (including road traffic injuries), diabetes-related limb complications, stroke-related disability, congenital conditions, and long-term impairment.
Like many systems highlighted across IMEA CPO, Nepal’s O&P ecosystem is not just about devices—it relies on the strength of the full rehabilitation pathway: assessment, fitting, physiotherapy, assistive technology provision, patient education, and long-term follow-up.
Nepal’s diabetes burden is rising and directly impacts the need for diabetic foot orthoses, protective footwear, Charcot management, wound offloading, and amputation prevention. The International Diabetes Federation (IDF) estimates:
Stroke is a major driver of disability and ongoing orthotic needs (especially AFOs, KAFOs, upper-limb supports, and mobility aids) and demand for neurorehabilitation. Evidence from community research in Nepal reports:
National census reporting shows:
National-level amputee totals are hard to standardise, but peer-reviewed research commonly cited in Nepal reports:
Nepal’s service landscape includes:
A practical list of visible providers contributing significantly to prosthetic and orthotic access:
A long-established rehabilitation centre with a dedicated Prosthetics & Orthotics team delivering custom devices and integrated rehab support.
A key rehabilitation centre (noted in ICRC-supported physical rehabilitation reporting) providing prosthetics, orthoses, and mobility aids alongside physiotherapy support.
One of Nepal’s most prominent paediatric orthopaedic and rehabilitation organisations, with a long-running Prosthetics & Orthotics department and large device output over decades.
A specialised spinal rehabilitation centre providing P&O and assistive devices as part of multidisciplinary rehabilitation planning.
A major orthopaedic institution (linked to disability services infrastructure in Kathmandu), providing orthopaedic care and related rehabilitation services (including orthotic/prosthetic-related support).
A visible upper-limb prosthetic initiative (with international collaboration), helping expand access to upper-limb solutions and follow-up support.
Nepal’s O&P sector faces system pressures that will be familiar across IMEA:
Nepal can significantly increase rehabilitation impact through:
Nepal is a high-impact rehabilitation market where strengthening orthotics and prosthetics directly improves outcomes for diabetes complications, stroke recovery, trauma rehabilitation, and disability inclusion. With continued investment in workforce development, regional access models, consistent device quality, and sustainable supply chains, Nepal can further mature into a model for scalable rehabilitation delivery in challenging geographies.