Rest is necessary after surgery, but rest does not always mean remaining still. Breathing, changing position and practising authorised activity can reduce the effects of inactivity and prepare a safe discharge.
There is no universal “golden period” for all surgery. Timing and progression depend on the procedure, wound, weight-bearing order, blood pressure, pain and individual complications.
1. Prolonged bed rest is rarely the whole plan—but movement must be safe
Appropriate movement can reduce the effects of prolonged inactivity, including loss of strength and endurance, stiffness, constipation, pressure injury, poor lung expansion and loss of confidence. “Early mobilisation” does not mean forcing everyone to walk. Activity must fit the operation, weight-bearing order, wound, blood pressure, pain and medical stability.
Begin with basic activity
This may include deep breathing, supported coughing, ankle pumps, position changes, sitting, standing or walking as authorised.
Blood-clot prevention is multimodal
Movement helps, but some people also need anticoagulants, stockings or intermittent compression according to risk.
Pain needs active management
Good pain control supports breathing, sleep and practice, but activity should not be progressed through severe pain, wound change or deterioration.
Some operations require restrictions
Spine, tendon, muscle, abdominal, cardiac or neurosurgery may have different precautions. Follow the surgical team.
2. There is no single postoperative “golden period” for every operation
The sound principle is to start rehabilitation as early as safely possible—not to rush everyone through the same timetable. Some hip or knee replacement patients may begin rehabilitation on the day of surgery or within 24 hours, while other procedures require different medical, wound or weight-bearing milestones.
Early goals
Prevent complications, manage pain, transfer safely, use the toilet and prepare for discharge.
Middle-stage goals
Restore permitted movement, strength, endurance, balance and self-care.
Later goals
Return to work, home roles, driving, sport or other meaningful activity using safety criteria.
Recovery time varies widely
Procedure, repaired tissue, complications, age, conditions and the target activity all affect the timeline.
3. Rehabilitation must begin with the surgeon’s information
Procedure and precautions
Know what was repaired, range restrictions, weight bearing, brace use and prohibited movements.
Wound and observations
Review bleeding, swelling, redness, heat, drainage, fever, blood pressure, pulse, oxygen and dizziness before progression.
Medicines and risk
Review analgesics, anticoagulants, blood-pressure medicines, diabetes medicines and sedatives that may affect falls or participation.
Patient goals
Use measurable goals such as walking 50 metres, climbing 10 steps, showering independently or returning to modified work.
4. Use the multidisciplinary team according to need
Surgeon or medical team
Sets precautions, reviews the wound, imaging and complications, and clears progression.
Physical therapist
Assesses movement, strength, balance, walking, aids and exercise progression.
Occupational therapist
Supports dressing, bathing, toileting, home tasks, hand or arm function and environmental adaptation when indicated.
Nursing and caregiving
Supports medicines, wound observation, symptoms, sleep, continence and safety. Twenty-four-hour RN staffing should not be assumed for every branch or package.
Nutrition and swallowing
Useful when intake is poor, weight is falling, wounds are present, or kidney, diabetes or swallowing concerns exist.
5. Technology is an adjunct, not the rehabilitation programme
Core outcomes come from assessment, exercise, real-task practice, pain management and continuity. Devices should not be advertised as guaranteed to remove pain or swelling, beautify wounds or restore muscle in every patient.
Peripheral magnetic stimulation
May be considered for selected indications, but evidence and suitability vary. It does not replace active practice or medical review.
Therapeutic ultrasound
Should not be claimed to accelerate every surgical wound, reduce all swelling or prevent scar tissue. Use requires an indication, target and safety review.
Aquatic treadmill or pool therapy
Water can unload joints, but the wound should be closed, infection absent, the surgeon should approve, and pool entry must be safe.
How to judge a device
Ask what problem it targets, contraindications, outcome measure and what the core programme would be without it.
6. Choosing the rehabilitation setting
Home rehabilitation
Can suit medically stable people when travel is difficult and real-home task and caregiver training are priorities.
Outpatient clinic
Can suit people able to travel who need reassessment and progressive exercise without continuous nursing.
Residential or inpatient rehabilitation
Consider when nursing, complex transfers, multiple conditions or unsafe discharge make home unsuitable—not because every operation requires a centre.
Questions before choosing
Who assesses, how often, what is included, how outcomes are measured, how emergencies are handled and how the surgeon is contacted.
7. A practical staged pathway
Stage 1: Safety and symptom control
Confirm restrictions, wound, pain and observations; practise breathing, positioning, transfers and aids.
Stage 2: Movement and self-care
Progress permitted range, strength, walking, balance, bathing, dressing and stairs.
Stage 3: Endurance and real tasks
Practise household tasks, community walking, lifting, driving or graded work duties.
Stage 4: Sport and recurrence prevention
Use objective strength, control and task criteria when the surgical and rehabilitation teams agree.
8. Red flags and documents to bring
Emergency help
Chest pain, sudden breathlessness, coughing blood, collapse, sudden neurological weakness or one-sided leg swelling with breathing symptoms.
Contact the surgical team promptly
Fever, marked redness or heat, pus, uncontrolled bleeding, unexpected increasing pain, wound separation, new numbness or brace problems.
Documents
Operation report, follow-up note, weight-bearing order, precautions, medicine list, conditions, allergies, test results and surgical contact.
Home and work information
Stairs, bathroom layout, caregiver availability, job demands, transport and equipment already available.
Key principle
Start rehabilitation as early as safely possible without forcing a universal schedule. Follow surgical precautions, use measurable goals, manage pain and complications, and practise real tasks consistently. Technology is an adjunct—not a guarantee.
K
KIN Rehabilitation & Homecare Clinical Content Team
Educational content prepared with rehabilitation medicine, physical therapy, nursing and post-operative care perspectives.
Important: This article provides general information and does not replace surgical instructions, wound review or an individual programme. Emergency symptoms require immediate assessment. Confirm branch services and equipment before booking.