Health Article | KIN Rehabilitation
Home Physical Therapy
6 Common Misconceptions and How to Choose Safely
Home-based care can be highly effective when it matches the person’s goals, medical condition and environment. The key is choosing the right professional, dose and setting.
Medically reviewed content | Prepared with physical therapy input | Updated: 26 June 2026 | Reading time: about 9 minutes
In this article
KIN Rehabilitation & Homecare provides rehabilitation and home-care services. This article explains what qualified home physical therapy should include, how to compare providers, and when home, outpatient or centre-based rehabilitation may be more appropriate. It is educational and does not replace an individual clinical assessment.
A good first visit begins with assessment, goals and a safe plan—not a standard exercise sheet.
1. What home physical therapy includes—and how to compare prices
Key point: A home visit is more than exercise delivery. It should include assessment, agreed goals, treatment, caregiver education, a home programme and a plan to review progress.
Home physical therapy may be suitable after stroke, surgery or hospitalisation and for older adults who have difficulty travelling. A therapist can assess transfers, walking, balance, strength, pain, endurance, fall risks and the actual home environment. Treatment should prioritise meaningful tasks such as getting out of bed, using the bathroom, walking safely and performing daily activities.
Before comparing fees, confirm the inclusions
| Item | What to confirm |
|---|---|
| Initial assessment | Whether it is longer or priced differently from follow-up sessions |
| Session and travel | Treatment time, travel zone, parking, stairs and extra-distance charges |
| Equipment | What is clinically indicated and whether consumables or rental are extra |
| Documentation | Goals, progress measures, home programme and report frequency |
| Terms | Cancellation, package expiry, replacement and refund conditions |
There is no single reliable “Bangkok market price” that applies to every 2026 case. Fees vary by distance, duration, complexity, therapist experience and provider. Obtain a current written quotation and avoid choosing on price alone.
2. Six common misconceptions about home physical therapy
Key point: The right service is not defined by a device, a location or a fixed number of visits. It is defined by qualified assessment, meaningful goals, appropriate practice and regular review.
"Home therapy works exactly the same as clinic therapy"
Partly true—neither setting is universally better
Home therapy is valuable for practising real transfers, stairs, bathroom access and caregiver routines. A centre may offer equipment or immediate access to several disciplines. Outcomes depend more on appropriate selection, task-specific practice, dose and continuity than on location alone.
"Wait until the patient is stronger before starting"
Assessment should not be unnecessarily delayed
After stroke or acute illness, rehabilitation should begin when the person is medically stable and able to participate safely. This does not mean high-dose mobilisation in the first 24 hours for everyone. The team should balance early activity with neurological status, cardiovascular stability, fatigue and treatment restrictions.
"One therapist visit per week is always enough"
The required dose is individual
One weekly visit may be appropriate for review in some cases and inadequate in others. Stroke rehabilitation commonly requires frequent, goal-directed practice across physical therapy, occupational therapy and speech therapy when needed. The therapist should prescribe what to practise between visits and monitor fatigue, quality and safety.
"Anyone can do physical therapy exercises"
Professional assessment must be performed by a licensed physical therapist
Family members and caregivers can support mobility and exercises after training, but they should follow a written plan and must not independently diagnose, change the programme or perform forceful techniques. In Thailand, check the provider in the Physical Therapy Council registry.
"The first three months must always be centre-based"
There is no universal three-month rule
Some people are appropriate for early supported discharge and coordinated rehabilitation at home soon after hospital care. Others need inpatient or centre-based rehabilitation because of medical complexity, high assistance needs, unsafe housing, multiple disciplines or specialised equipment. Reassess the setting as needs change.
"Massage is the same as physical therapy"
Massage may be one technique, but it is not a complete rehabilitation plan
Physical therapy begins with assessment and may include task practice, strengthening, balance, gait training, education, pain management and environmental modification. Manual therapy or massage may be used when indicated, but passive treatment alone does not replace active, goal-directed rehabilitation.
Caregivers can support a prescribed programme, but they do not replace professional assessment.
3. How to choose a home physical therapist safely
Key point: Hiring an independent physical therapist is not inherently unsafe. The important questions are licence status, relevant experience, assessment quality, documentation, communication and the emergency plan.
Active professional licence
Ask for the licence number and verify the therapist through the Thailand Physical Therapy Council’s public registry.
Relevant experience
Experience should match the main problem, such as stroke, frailty, joint replacement, Parkinson’s disease, falls or pain.
Assessment and goals
Expect baseline findings, agreed goals and a clear explanation of why each intervention is being used.
Records and consent
Confirm session notes, privacy, consent, medical-team communication and who receives progress reports.
Safety and escalation
The therapist should screen for red flags and explain when to stop, contact a doctor or call emergency services.
Fees and continuity
Use written terms covering travel, cancellation, packages, replacement arrangements and transfer of records.
Stop and seek urgent help when appropriate
New facial droop, one-sided weakness, speech difficulty, loss of consciousness, seizure, severe chest pain, severe breathing difficulty, a major fall or a sudden marked change requires urgent assessment. In Thailand, call 1669 for a life-threatening emergency.
4. Home therapy or a rehabilitation centre—which is more appropriate?
Key point: The choice should not be based on an arbitrary three-month cut-off. It should be based on medical stability, safety, goals, access, caregiver capacity and the need for equipment or an interdisciplinary team.
| Dimension | Home physical therapy | Clinic or rehabilitation centre |
|---|---|---|
| Real-life practice | Actual bed, bathroom, stairs and routines | Controlled or simulated setting |
| Travel | Avoided | Transport may be required |
| Equipment | Portable and task-specific | May include larger or specialised systems |
| Team access | Depends on the service model | Often easier access to several disciplines |
| Best fit | Safe home, difficult travel, functional home goals or supported discharge | Complex needs, intensive supervision or centre-only equipment |
Some people can begin coordinated home-based stroke rehabilitation soon after discharge when the environment is safe and an appropriately skilled team is available. Others need inpatient or centre-based rehabilitation first. A blended plan may use both settings over time.
The best setting depends on safety, goals, access, equipment and interdisciplinary needs.
5. KIN home physical therapy—what families should confirm
Key point: The service should be matched to the person after assessment. Confirm credentials, session scope, reporting, service area, current fees and how medical concerns are escalated.
Function, transfers, gait, balance, safety, goals and the home environment should guide the plan.
Progress review
Ask which outcomes will be measured, how often progress is reviewed and when the programme changes.
Caregiver training
Family or paid caregivers can be trained in safe assistance and the prescribed practice programme.
Coordinated referral
With consent, concerns can be referred or communicated to the appropriate doctor, nurse or rehabilitation discipline according to service arrangements.
KIN also provides links to stroke rehabilitation, home caregivers, home nursing and day-care services. Availability, suitability, response times, prices and package inclusions should be confirmed directly before booking.
“The best rehabilitation setting is not automatically the home or the centre. It is the setting that delivers safe, goal-directed and sufficiently frequent practice for this person—and changes as their needs change.”
— KIN Rehabilitation & Homecare
Progress should be measured and the plan adjusted as needs change.