Uzbekistan’s orthotics and prosthetics (O&P) ecosystem is largely public-sector anchored, with national rehabilitation/prosthetics centres providing assessment, fabrication, fitting, and follow-up for persons with disabilities. Demand is being driven by rapidly rising diabetes prevalence, sustained stroke and cardiovascular disability, trauma, and long-term mobility impairment.
What stands out in Uzbekistan is the policy direction on financing and access: national legislation frames prosthetic-orthopaedic aids and technical rehabilitation devices as a state-budget responsibility (including manufacture and repair), while recent reforms are shifting delivery toward voucher-based, e-commerce-enabled reimbursement and an expanded list of guaranteed items.
Diabetes is a major long-term driver of O&P demand through diabetic foot ulcers, Charcot risk, vascular complications, and amputation risk. The IDF Diabetes Atlas estimates for Uzbekistan:
Stroke and CVD remain major contributors to disability—driving demand for AFOs/KAFOs, upper-limb supports, gait rehabilitation, and long-term follow-up. An Uzbekistan stroke registry paper reported incidence of ~310.32 cases per 100,000 (age ≥20) in the studied zones, underlining the scale of rehabilitation need.
(Separately, global projections research has flagged Uzbekistan among countries expected to see large increases in age-adjusted stroke incidence trends.)
Uzbekistan has been strengthening its disability and social protection framework, including policies that explicitly cover prosthetic-orthopaedic aids and technical rehabilitation devices as part of state commitments.
Publicly consolidated national amputee totals are not consistently available in one place, but the combination of large diabetes burden and stroke/CVD-related disability signals sustained demand for prostheses, orthoses, footwear/offloading, and repair services.
Uzbekistan’s O&P delivery model can be described as state-funded + centre-based, with an accelerating shift to digitised access and reimbursement:
The primary public-facing national facility describing a dedicated Prosthetics Department and rehabilitation/prosthetics service provision.
A specialist orthopaedics/trauma institute and clinical base, relevant to complex musculoskeletal pathways and referrals that commonly require orthotic support and post-surgical rehabilitation integration.
A private provider explicitly offering prosthetic and orthotic fittings, diagnostics (including 3D scanning), and rehabilitation support in one facility model.
The national centre is listed with branch locations (e.g., Mirzo-Ulugbek/Yashnabad listings), indicating a broader delivery footprint beyond a single building—important for follow-up and repairs.
Uzbekistan is moving toward a clearer, more scalable financing model with three key pillars:
Core policy positions prosthetic-orthopaedic aids and technical rehabilitation devices as a state-funded obligation, including manufacture and repair—creating a foundation for reimbursement.
Government communications report the state-guaranteed list expanding from 18 to 30 items, widening what can be reimbursed/covered.
From 2024, Uzbekistan introduced a system to provide prosthetic devices and rehabilitation aids through electronic commerce on a voucher basis (phased rollout from Tashkent/Samarkand to nationwide). The same update reports reimbursement amounts increased ~3x on average and up to 10x for some items—a strong signal that reimbursement ceilings are being raised to match real market costs.
Practical implication: for patients, this should gradually mean more choice of products/providers, faster procurement, and more transparent reimbursement—though outcomes will depend on implementation quality, provider accreditation, and repair/maintenance funding.
Uzbekistan is one of the more interesting Central Asian markets because reimbursement is not just “policy talk”—it’s being operationalised through expanded guaranteed lists and a voucher-based digital purchasing model, with reported increases in reimbursed amounts. With diabetes estimated at ~1.5 million adults (20–79) in 2024 and a meaningful stroke burden, the winners in this ecosystem will be those who can deliver quality + follow-up + measurable outcomes at scale—supported by transparent reimbursement, modern fabrication, and regional access.