Patients relearning everyday independence
For dressing, feeding, grooming, transfers, and other routine tasks after stroke, weakness, or neurological recovery.
Regain the skills needed for daily living. Sajjad Rehabilitation brings certified Occupational Therapists (OT) to your home. Whether it's recovering from a stroke, managing hand injuries, or helping a child with developmental delays, we provide personalized therapy in your comfortable home environment.
Home occupational therapy is most useful when daily activities like dressing, feeding, writing, hand use, balance, or routine tasks become difficult after illness, injury, or developmental delay.It works best when therapy has to improve real function inside the same home where the patient actually lives and manages each day.
For dressing, feeding, grooming, transfers, and other routine tasks after stroke, weakness, or neurological recovery.
For grip weakness, hand stiffness, coordination problems, and recovery after fracture, tendon injury, or surgery.
For attention, fine motor work, handwriting, self-care, and sensory regulation in a more familiar environment.
For elders who are slowing down in bathing, dressing, kitchen work, or safe movement inside the house.
Practical training for bathing, dressing, eating, grooming, transfers, and other tasks the patient needs to do more independently.
Targeted exercises and functional work for grip, dexterity, fine motor control, and arm use after injury, stroke, or surgery.
Structured sensory activities for children who struggle with regulation, focus, tolerance, body awareness, or daily routine participation.
Task-based occupational therapy for stroke, brain injury, spinal conditions, and neurological weakness affecting daily independence.
Practical guidance on positioning, energy conservation, safer movement, and home changes that make daily activity easier.
Support for play, attention, handwriting, school readiness, self-care, and behavior-linked functional challenges in children.
Practical home OT with functional training, family guidance, and progress built around real daily life.
Every visit follows a clear care plan so treatment stays structured and purposeful.
Patients are matched with trained therapists and care staff based on their needs.
Families stay informed so home care is easier to follow and continue between visits.
Regular follow-up helps patients continue recovery with less disruption and better consistency.
Care is delivered with practical safety, hygiene, and attention to patient comfort during each visit.
Home appointments are planned around patient needs so therapy becomes easier to continue regularly.
Patients can continue therapy in a familiar environment that reduces stress and supports better cooperation.
Our home occupational therapy services are expanding to support patients and families who need functional training, hand recovery, sensory work, and better independence inside the home.
We are expanding our home occupational therapy network across India.
Physiotherapy usually focuses more on pain, muscle strength, balance, and movement. Occupational therapy focuses on how the patient actually manages daily tasks such as dressing, feeding, writing, hand use, and safer function inside the home. Many patients need both, but the goals are different.
Yes. That is exactly where occupational therapy becomes important. A patient may regain basic walking but still struggle with fine motor control, coordination, planning, one-hand function, or routine daily activities. Home OT targets those real-life tasks directly.
A lot of occupational therapy can be started with household items, the patient's own furniture, and task-based practice using real daily routines. Extra tools are suggested only when they are actually useful for function or safety.
Yes. Home OT does not depend only on table work. Sessions can use movement, play, sensory activities, routine practice, and short task blocks based on what the child can realistically tolerate and respond to.
Family follow-through matters a lot. The therapist usually gives simple task practice, handling suggestions, or environmental changes that should continue between visits. Progress is usually better when daily routines support the therapy plan.
If there is a sudden new weakness, acute confusion, severe pain, repeated falls, a new medical emergency, or a major decline in function, medical review should not be delayed. Home OT works best when the patient is medically stable enough for rehabilitation.