You shouldn’t have to choose between getting the care you need and the hassle of getting there. That’s the reality for a lot of people in Williston Park dealing with mobility issues, recovering from surgery, or managing chronic pain.
In-home physical therapy means your treatment happens in your space, on your schedule. No fighting traffic on Hillside Avenue. No arranging rides or worrying about parking near the train station.
Your therapist comes to you with everything needed for a full session. Balance training in your hallway. Gait training on the stairs you actually use. Strength exercises with the furniture you navigate daily. The goal isn’t just to help you move better in a clinic—it’s to help you function better in the home and community where you actually live.
Falls send one in three seniors over 65 to the hospital every year. Most of those falls happen at home. We work on fall prevention where it matters most—identifying trip hazards in your kitchen, practicing safe transfers from your own bed, building strength on the surfaces you walk on every day.
We’ve been serving Long Island since 2010. We’re not a startup testing a new model—we’ve built a reputation across Nassau County by showing up, doing the work, and helping people get results.
Our therapists are licensed professionals and members of the American Physical Therapy Association. We accept Medicare and work within your coverage to make therapy accessible without the runaround.
Williston Park families know us because we’ve treated their parents, their neighbors, and their friends. We’ve worked with residents in the tree-lined streets near Hillside, seniors in the apartments off Willis Avenue, and patients throughout New Hyde Park, Albertson, Mineola, and Garden City. This isn’t a corporate chain dropping into town—we’re part of the community we serve.
First, we talk. You’ll speak with our team about what’s going on—whether it’s recovering from a stroke, managing joint pain, regaining strength after surgery, or preventing falls. We’ll confirm your Medicare coverage and physician referral if needed.
Then we schedule your first session at a time that works for you. Your therapist arrives with all necessary equipment and conducts a full evaluation in your home. They’ll assess your mobility, strength, balance, and any specific challenges you’re facing in your daily routine.
From there, you get a personalized treatment plan. Not a photocopy from someone else’s file—a plan built around your goals, your limitations, and your environment. Maybe that’s gait training to walk safely to the post office on Hillside. Maybe it’s therapeutic exercise to build strength for gardening. Maybe it’s neurological rehabilitation after a stroke.
Sessions happen on a schedule that fits your life. Your therapist guides you through exercises, monitors your progress, adjusts your plan as you improve, and teaches you techniques to keep getting stronger between visits. You’re not just going through the motions—you’re working toward measurable goals with someone who knows what they’re doing.
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You get the full scope of outpatient physical therapy without stepping foot in a clinic. That includes fall prevention programs with balance and proprioceptive training designed specifically for the Nassau County senior population. One-third of older adults fall each year, and the right intervention can reduce that risk by 25%.
Stroke rehabilitation and neurological rehabilitation are core services we provide. If you’ve experienced a stroke, Parkinson’s, or another neurological condition, we bring specialized care to your home. Gait training, neuromuscular re-education, and functional movement work happen in the environment where you need those skills most.
Pre and post-surgery rehabilitation covers everything from joint replacements to cardiac procedures. Injury rehabilitation addresses sprains, strains, and orthopedic issues. Occupational therapy helps you regain the skills needed for daily tasks—dressing, cooking, bathing—so you can maintain independence.
Resistance and strength training, therapeutic exercise, and joint pain treatment round out the services. These aren’t cookie-cutter programs. They’re adjusted based on what you can do today and what you want to do tomorrow. Medicare covers these services when medically necessary, and we handle the documentation and coordination with your physician.
Yes, Medicare Part B covers outpatient physical therapy services in your home when it’s medically necessary and ordered by your physician. You’ll need a referral and a documented need for therapy—like recovering from surgery, managing a chronic condition, or addressing mobility limitations that make it difficult to leave your home.
Medicare typically covers 80% of the approved amount after you meet your deductible. You’re responsible for the remaining 20%. There are annual caps on therapy services, but exceptions exist for patients who need continued care. We handle the billing and work directly with Medicare to make the process as straightforward as possible.
If you’re unsure about your coverage, call us. We’ll verify your benefits, explain what’s covered, and let you know about any out-of-pocket costs before your first session. No surprises.
Fall prevention starts with figuring out why you’re at risk. Your therapist evaluates your balance, strength, gait, and home environment. They’re looking for weak hip muscles, poor ankle stability, vision issues affecting spatial awareness, or hazards like loose rugs and poor lighting.
From there, you get a program that addresses your specific risk factors. Balance training might include standing exercises that challenge your stability in controlled ways. Proprioceptive training helps your body understand where it is in space—critical for preventing trips and catches. Gait training corrects walking patterns that increase fall risk.
Strength work focuses on the muscles that keep you upright—your core, hips, and legs. We also teach you how to get up if you do fall, how to use assistive devices correctly, and how to modify your home to reduce hazards. The goal is measurable: fewer falls, more confidence, and the ability to move through your home safely.
It depends entirely on what you’re recovering from and how your body responds. Post-surgical rehab might run six to twelve weeks. Stroke rehabilitation could take several months. Chronic conditions like arthritis or Parkinson’s might need ongoing maintenance sessions.
Your therapist sets goals with you at the start—specific, measurable targets like walking without a cane, climbing stairs independently, or reducing pain to a manageable level. As you hit those goals, the frequency of sessions typically decreases. You might start with three sessions a week and taper to once a week or every other week as you improve.
Medicare has guidelines about how long they’ll cover therapy, but those aren’t hard stops if you’re still making progress. We document your improvements and work with your doctor to justify continued care when it’s needed. The focus is always on getting you to a point where you can function independently—not keeping you in therapy longer than necessary.
Yes, but Medicare’s coverage rules are stricter if you’re not homebound. To qualify for Medicare-covered home health services, you generally need to meet the homebound criteria—meaning leaving home requires considerable effort due to illness, injury, or disability.
If you can leave your home relatively easily, you might still choose in-home therapy and pay out of pocket, or your therapist might recommend outpatient clinic visits instead. Some people prefer the convenience and personalized environment of home therapy even when they’re mobile enough to travel.
The real question is what serves your recovery best. If your challenges are specific to your home environment—navigating your stairs, moving safely in your bathroom, preventing falls in your kitchen—then home therapy makes sense regardless of whether you can technically get to a clinic. We’ll have an honest conversation about what’s covered, what’s not, and what option gives you the best outcome.
Physical therapy focuses on movement—strength, balance, mobility, and pain management. If you’re working on walking better, preventing falls, recovering from surgery, or managing joint pain, that’s physical therapy. Your PT helps you move through your environment more safely and with less discomfort.
Occupational therapy focuses on function—the activities of daily living that let you take care of yourself. If you’re relearning how to dress, cook, bathe, or use your hands after a stroke, that’s occupational therapy. Your OT helps you regain independence in the tasks that make up your day.
There’s overlap. Both might work on strength or coordination, but the end goal differs. PT gets you moving. OT gets you doing. Many patients benefit from both, especially after a stroke or major surgery. We coordinate between therapists when that’s the case, so you’re not getting redundant care—you’re getting comprehensive support that addresses both how you move and what you do.
If getting to a clinic is difficult, stressful, or impossible, in-home therapy is worth considering. That includes people with severe mobility limitations, those recovering from major surgery, seniors at high risk for falls, or anyone who finds that the effort of traveling to appointments interferes with their recovery.
In-home therapy also makes sense when your challenges are specific to your living environment. If you’re struggling with your stairs, your bathroom layout, or navigating tight spaces in your home, working with a therapist in that exact setting is more effective than simulating it in a clinic.
Start with a conversation. Call us and describe what you’re dealing with. We’ll tell you honestly whether in-home therapy is the right fit or if another option serves you better. If your physician has recommended therapy and you’re unsure about the logistics, we’ll verify your Medicare coverage and walk you through what to expect. You’re not locked into anything by asking questions.
Other Services we provide in Williston Park