"Don't Wait Until You're 'Ready' for Stroke Rehabilitation: The High Risks of Prolonged Bed Rest and Why Early Intervention is Essential"

"Don't Wait Until You're 'Ready' for Stroke Rehabilitation: The High Risks of Prolonged Bed Rest and Why Early Intervention is Essential"
 

Health Article | KIN Rehabilitation

Stroke rehabilitation: do not wait until the person seems “ready”
The hidden risks of prolonged inactivity

Helping a person walk immediately after stroke without assessment may increase the risk of falls and injury. However, delaying appropriate rehabilitation for too long can also lead to avoidable deconditioning.

By Chonthicha Saleewatsaporn, Physiotherapist, KIN Rehabilitation & Homecare | Reviewed by the KIN medical and multidisciplinary team | Last updated: May 2026 | 7-minute read

What this article covers

1. Why “waiting until ready” can be risky 2. What to assess before walking 3. A safer path toward walking 4. Barriers that may slow progress 5. How KIN may support rehabilitation 6. Ask about an assessment

1. Why can “waiting until ready before starting rehabilitation” be risky?

In brief: “Ready” should mean medically stable and able to participate safely—not already strong enough to stand or walk independently. Strength, balance and confidence are usually built through appropriately graded rehabilitation, so waiting for them to appear on their own can delay progress.

Families may worry that rehabilitation will cause pain or be too demanding. Rest and pacing are important after stroke, especially when fatigue or medical instability is present, but prolonged inactivity without an individualized plan can contribute to weakness, stiffness, reduced endurance and loss of confidence. Rehabilitation should begin when medically appropriate and be adjusted to symptoms, fatigue and safety.

A cycle families may not notice

Wait for more strength Less activity and muscle loss Greater weakness and deconditioning Keep waiting ...

2. What should be assessed before gait training?

In brief: Before gait training, a clinician should assess medical stability, alertness and communication, trunk control, transfers, lower-limb strength and weight acceptance, balance, sensation and vision, joint range, pain, blood-pressure response, fatigue, footwear, assistive devices and the environment. Readiness is not a universal three-item pass/fail checklist.

1

Can the person sit and control the trunk safely?

There is no universal requirement to sit unsupported for exactly 1–2 minutes. The physiotherapist considers sitting quality, the assistance needed, dizziness, fatigue, attention and the ability to recover balance before deciding how to progress.

2

Can the person transfer and accept weight with appropriate support?

Perfectly symmetrical weight-bearing is not required before standing. The therapist assesses how much support, cueing, bracing or equipment is needed and whether standing practice can be introduced safely.

3

Have balance and fall risk been assessed?

Physiotherapists combine standardized measures with clinical assessment to decide whether to practise transfers, standing or walking, what equipment is needed and how much assistance should be provided.

3. A safer progression toward walking

In brief: A common progression may include bed mobility, sitting, transfers, supported standing, weight shifting and stepping. These stages can overlap, and a person may move forward or back depending on fatigue, medical status and performance. The aim is early, safe and meaningful practice—not rigidly completing one stage before another.

Step 1: Bed mobility and sitting at the bedside

Practise rolling, moving to sitting and controlling the trunk with the amount of assistance required. The goal is safe, purposeful sitting and participation—not meeting a fixed 1–2-minute cutoff.

Step 2: Transfers and weight shifting

Practise shifting weight and loading the legs in sitting or standing as appropriate, while protecting joints and using suitable assistance or equipment.

Step 3: Supported standing and balance practice

Standing may be practised with a physiotherapist, trained staff or suitable equipment. The task should be adjusted to alignment, blood-pressure response, fatigue and fall risk before stepping is introduced.

Step 4: Assisted stepping with gradually reduced support

Begin stepping with the appropriate device and level of assistance. Distance, speed, task complexity and support should be progressed according to safety, quality of movement and the person’s goals.

4. Important barriers that may slow walking recovery

In brief: Walking recovery can be affected by stroke severity, medical complications, weakness, spasticity, pain, fatigue, sensory or visual loss, neglect, cognition, fear of falling, limited practice, unsuitable equipment and an unsafe environment. Delayed or poorly matched rehabilitation may also contribute, but it is rarely the only reason.

Leg weakness and muscle loss associated with inactivity

Reduced activity can contribute to loss of strength and endurance, making transfers and standing more difficult. Progressive practice and resistance training may help when medically appropriate.

Joint stiffness, pain or limited range of movement

Restricted ankle, knee or hip movement can shorten steps and increase compensatory movement. These issues should be assessed early, but compensatory patterns are not simply “embedded in the brain” and may be useful or modifiable depending on the person’s needs.

Insufficient balance for the current task

Balance problems may result from the stroke itself as well as weakness, sensory loss, vision changes, vestibular problems, medication or inactivity. Training should match the person’s current ability and fall risk.

Fear of falling

Fear after a fall or near-fall can reduce activity and confidence. Graded practice, clear explanations, appropriate equipment and a supportive environment can help rebuild confidence.

Goal-led walking practice at home — KIN HomeCare

KIN HomeCare states that its physiotherapists can assess mobility and provide home-based practice. Families should confirm the clinician’s qualifications, assessment process, safety plan, frequency, travel charges and current service availability before booking.

View home physiotherapy information

5. How KIN may support safe, goal-led walking practice

In brief: KIN states that it assesses each person before treatment and may use equipment such as body-weight-support systems or aquatic treadmills when clinically indicated. No device is automatically safer or more effective for everyone, and suitability depends on medical screening, transfers, staffing, goals and the overall rehabilitation plan.

Aquatic therapy may reduce loading through buoyancy and can provide another setting for practising movement in selected people. It requires screening for medical stability, skin and wound issues, continence, seizures, cognition, communication, breathing and circulation, as well as safe pool access, transfer equipment and an emergency plan. It does not replace land-based training when land practice is needed.Stroke rehabilitation programmeandfamily testimonialsfor source-listed information about KIN services and experiences; individual outcomes cannot be guaranteed.

“Many people after stroke can improve their walking when rehabilitation begins at an appropriate time, is accurately assessed and is adjusted to their goals. Stroke severity matters, but so do medical stability, practice quality, dose, environment and ongoing review.”

— KIN Rehabilitation & Homecare multidisciplinary team | Established in 2018

Contact us | Ask about an assessment

Lat Phrao 71

Medical Hub

Bearing (Sukhumvit 107)

Physical Therapy Hospital

Pattaya

Chonburi

Ratchaphruek

Nonthaburi

Ramkhamhaeng 24

 

Salaya

 

Frequently asked questions — answered by the KIN team

How can we tell whether a person is ready to practise walking?

A physiotherapist should assess the person rather than relying on observation alone. Readiness depends on medical stability, cognition and communication, trunk control, transfers, leg function, balance, sensation, vision, blood-pressure response, fatigue and the support or equipment available. There is no single universal threshold.

How can aquatic therapy support walking practice?

Water can reduce loading, with the amount varying by water depth, body composition, posture and movement. This may allow selected people to practise standing or stepping with support, but it does not guarantee a correct gait pattern or replace land-based practice. Medical and transfer safety screening is required.

What should be done if the person falls during walking practice?

Stop the activity and assess for injury. Seek urgent medical help for head impact, loss of consciousness, severe pain, inability to bear weight, new neurological symptoms, significant bleeding or other concerning signs. The rehabilitation team should review the cause, environment, assistance and equipment before practice resumes. Falls should not be treated as a routine or acceptable part of therapy.

What if the person is afraid of falling and refuses to practise?

Start with tasks the person considers safe and agree on small goals. Graded exposure, additional support, suitable devices, education and treatment of pain, dizziness or anxiety may help. Aquatic therapy is one option for selected people, not a required first step.

If the stroke was mild and symptoms have improved, is further rehabilitation needed?

A person with a mild stroke may still have subtle problems with balance, endurance, hand use, vision, language, thinking, mood or return to work. A professional assessment can identify remaining goals. Rehabilitation should continue only as needed, while secondary stroke prevention and medical follow-up remain important. There is no fixed “golden period” or guarantee of complete recovery.

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