Physiotherapy in NZ
  What is physiotherapy?
  What physiotherapy can do for you
  Choosing a physiotherapist
  What to expect from your consultation
  How to become/register as a physiotherapist
  The New Zealand Society of Physiotherapists

What is Physiotherapy?

Physiotherapy (Physical Therapy) in New Zealand

Physiotherapists help people move and participate in life and in their communities, especially when movement and function are threatened by ageing, injury, disability or disease.

Physiotherapists are involved in health promotion, injury prevention, treatment and rehabilitation. 

After assessing a patient’s potential for movement and function, the physiotherapist establishes (together with the patient, whanau/family and caregivers) treatment goals

designed to restore or develop that potential, and then maintain it.

The physiotherapy process involves assessment, diagnosis, planning, intervention, treatment or rehabilitation.  Physiotherapy is provided in a variety of settings.

Click here to display some of the many ways physiotherapists help people to achieve the most from life.

Click here for some of the research currently being undertaken by New Zealand physiotherapists (New Zealand physical therapists)

In New Zealand, it is a requirement under the Health Practitioners Competence Assurance Act for all physiotherapists to be registered with the Physiotherapy Board of New Zealand, which ensures that they meet the competencies required to practise physiotherapy and monitors their ongoing competence.

Note that, in some parts of the world, physiotherapy is called physical therapy and physiotherapists are called physical therapists.