Oman’s orthotics, prosthetics, and rehabilitation services sit within a comparatively strong, centralised public healthcare system—yet demand is rising fast due to diabetes, stroke-related disability, and an increasing need for long-term mobility support. As in many IMEA markets, the opportunity is not only about devices, but about strengthening the full pathway: referral, assessment, fabrication, fitting, physiotherapy, follow-up, and repairs—so outcomes remain consistent beyond the initial fitting.
Oman has one of the higher diabetes burdens in the region. The International Diabetes Federation (IDF) estimates for 2024:
This is a major driver of demand for diabetic foot orthoses/offloading, protective footwear, Charcot management, and amputation prevention programs.
Stroke remains a meaningful contributor to disability and rehabilitation needs. Oman Observer reporting (Jan 2024) notes:
Clinical data from a Muscat tertiary setting also highlights the risk profile: diabetes and hypertension are highly prevalent among stroke patients.
Oman’s national e-census reporting indicates:
(As in many countries, disability prevalence varies by definition and measurement method.)
Oman-specific amputee totals are not consistently published as one national figure, but the diabetic foot burden is clearly significant. An Oman Medical Journal clinical note cites Ministry of Health data indicating:
Oman’s model is best described as hospital-anchored rehabilitation with government-led service development and expanding infrastructure:
A practical list of the most visible service anchors and pathways:
A key national facility for orthopaedic and trauma care, with a dedicated P&O department and expanded infrastructure for manufacturing, fitting, and training.
Major referral hospital with multidisciplinary rehabilitation services supporting post-acute recovery and long-term therapy needs (critical for stroke, complex orthopaedics, and mobility care).
A leading academic hospital supporting specialist care, training, and multidisciplinary pathways that interface with orthopaedics and rehabilitation demand.
A Ministry of Health-backed initiative to expand rehab capacity (adult/paediatric), including prosthetics-related services as described in reporting.
Oman is a high-potential market where the healthcare system can support standardised, outcomes-driven rehabilitation—but demand will continue to rise with diabetes at ~17% adult prevalence and ongoing stroke-related disability. The biggest near-term wins are strengthening diabetic foot prevention, expanding repair/maintenance pathways, and scaling multidisciplinary rehabilitation capacity through national investments now underway.