Qatar’s orthotics, prosthetics, and rehabilitation ecosystem operates within one of the most advanced healthcare systems in the region, anchored by centralised public providers, strong academic medicine, and a growing private rehabilitation sector. Demand is driven predominantly by very high diabetes prevalence, a sustained stroke-related disability burden, and the long-term mobility needs of people living with physical impairments—creating consistent need for prosthetic limbs, orthotic bracing, diabetic foot offloading/footwear, mobility aids, physiotherapy, and structured follow-up.
As with other mature IMEA systems, the strategic focus has shifted from access alone to optimising the full rehabilitation pathway: referral → assessment → fabrication/fitting → therapy → follow-up → maintenance.
Qatar ranks among the highest diabetes-prevalence countries globally. IDF estimates for 2024:
This is a primary driver of diabetic foot orthoses/offloading, protective footwear, Charcot management, and limb-preservation pathways.
Stroke remains a significant contributor to disability, generating sustained need for AFOs/KAFOs, upper-limb supports, mobility aids, and neurorehabilitation. Regional analyses consistently show meaningful stroke mortality and long-term disability in the Gulf, with risk profiles strongly linked to diabetes and hypertension.
Qatar reports disability through national registries and planning datasets. While prevalence varies by definition and methodology, national health and social care systems plan services around a growing registered population requiring long-term rehabilitation, assistive technology, and follow-up.
Clinical reporting from Qatar consistently identifies diabetes as the dominant risk factor for lower-limb amputations, reinforcing the national emphasis on diabetic foot screening, early offloading, and multidisciplinary limb-salvage programs.
Qatar’s O&P delivery model is best described as highly centralised, hospital-anchored, and outcomes-focused:
The backbone of Qatar’s public O&P and rehabilitation delivery, integrating orthopaedics, trauma, diabetes care, and neurorehabilitation across multiple hospitals.
Qatar’s primary specialist rehabilitation facility, delivering multidisciplinary inpatient and outpatient rehabilitation, including orthotic provision and long-term follow-up.
A leading academic medical centre supporting paediatric orthotics, complex congenital conditions, and multidisciplinary rehabilitation pathways.
A growing segment providing custom orthoses, prosthetic services, gait rehabilitation, and physiotherapy, often focused on long-term outpatient management and rapid access.
Qatar is a high-capacity, high-outcomes healthcare market where orthotics and prosthetics strategy is increasingly about prevention, continuity, and measurable results. With diabetes prevalence around 20% of adults and sustained stroke-related disability needs, the greatest national gains will come from scaling diabetic foot prevention, strengthening follow-up and repair pathways, and embedding orthotic intervention earlier within stroke and rehabilitation care pathways.