Orlando · Orange County
Low Back Pain & Lumbar Strain Physical Therapy in Orlando, FL
In-home low back pain rehab delivered by Florida-licensed Doctors of Physical Therapy, billed through PIP and MedPay. No drive to a clinic, no waiting room, no missed visits.

Low back pain is the leading cause of years lived with disability worldwide[1] and the second most common reason our clinicians are called out after a Florida MVA. NIH data place lifetime prevalence in U.S. adults at roughly 80%, with about 25% of adults reporting low back pain in any given 3-month period[2]. Post-crash low back pain has a distinct pattern: a combination of lumbar paraspinal muscle strain, facet joint irritation, and pelvic ring asymmetry caused by the seatbelt loading the torso asymmetrically during impact — and pain that's worse with prolonged sitting (which is exactly what every PI patient does while waiting on doctor follow-ups and adjuster visits).
In Orlando, most low back pain patients we treat were injured on I-4 through downtown Orlando or one of the surrounding Orange County corridors and were discharged from Orlando Regional Medical Center (Level I trauma) within 24–72 hours of the collision. By the time the discharge paperwork is filed, our intake team is often already on the phone with the patient — and our Orlando-based DPTs can usually have a first in-home evaluation on the calendar within 48 hours.
Symptoms we see in Orlando patients
The clinical priority is to rule out the small percentage of cases that need imaging or surgical consult — cauda equina, fracture, infection — and then to get the patient moving early. The 2017 American College of Physicians guideline explicitly recommends non-pharmacologic treatment, including exercise, spinal manipulation, and heat, as first-line for acute and subacute low back pain[3]. A 2017 JAMA systematic review found spinal manipulative therapy produced modest short-term improvements in pain and function comparable to other recommended therapies[4]. The Treatment-Based Classification approach — matching patients to manipulation, stabilization, specific exercise, or traction — has the strongest functional outcomes data in the PT literature[5].
- Aching or sharp pain across the lumbar paraspinals, often worse on one side
- Stiffness after sitting more than 20–30 minutes or first thing in the morning
- Pain with bending forward, twisting, or transitioning sit-to-stand
- Radiating pain, tingling, or numbness into the buttock or down the leg (sciatica — flag the DPT)
- Muscle spasm or visible guarding on one side of the spine
Key data points
Sourced from peer-reviewed clinical practice guidelines and government health data. Click any figure for the underlying citation.
- #1
global cause of years lived with disability
Source [1] - ~80%
U.S. adult lifetime prevalence
Source [2] - 25%
of adults in any 3-month window
Source [2] - 0
imaging studies recommended in first 6 weeks without red flags
Source [7]
How in-home PT treats low back pain in Orlando
The in-home evaluation includes a neurologic screen (myotomes L2–S1, reflexes, straight-leg raise, slump test), lumbar range of motion in all planes, palpation of the lumbar paraspinals and gluteal muscles, and a functional assessment of sit-to-stand, gait, and a basic squat. We use the Treatment-Based Classification system[5] to sort patients into one of four buckets, each with its own evidence base. The APTA / JOSPT low back pain CPG aligns interventions with stage of care: thrust manipulation and exercise for acute, motor-control and aerobic exercise for subacute, and progressive resistance plus pain education for chronic[6].
Most acute and subacute post-crash patients land in the manipulation or stabilization category. Manual therapy is delivered on the patient's own bed or a portable mat; lumbar stabilization work uses bodyweight (dead bugs, bird dogs, side planks) and a single resistance band. Routine imaging is explicitly discouraged in the first 6 weeks without red flags[7]. The DPT also addresses the workstation, the driver's seat, and the patient's sleep position — the three places where back pain is reinforced between visits.
Orlando is the metro where the in-home model proves itself most clearly. A patient living in Lake Nona who was injured on I-4 cannot realistically attend PT at a clinic downtown three times a week — and the reverse is just as true for a downtown patient referred to an outpatient clinic in Dr. Phillips. By bringing the therapist to the patient, we keep treatment continuous from week 1 through discharge, regardless of where in the metro the patient lives. Our Orlando clinicians treat the full range of post-MVA cases: cervical-spine sprains, lumbar disc symptoms, post-concussive syndromes, and post-surgical knee, shoulder, and hip rehabilitation.
Typical recovery timeline
Uncomplicated mechanical low back pain typically resolves in 6 to 12 visits over 4 to 8 weeks. About 33% of acute low back pain becomes recurrent within one year[1], which is why a discharge home-exercise program is built into every plan of care.
Where Orlando low back pain patients come from
I-4 through Orlando — particularly the I-4 / SR 408 interchange and the segment running past downtown — produces the largest single share of severe crashes in Orange County. The 408 East-West Expressway, the 417, John Young Parkway, and Colonial Drive (SR 50) carry the surface-street crash load. Patients are most often taken to Orlando Regional Medical Center (Level I trauma), AdventHealth Orlando, or, for residents on the south side, to the Lake Nona campus.
Hospitals
- · Orlando Regional Medical Center (Level I trauma)
- · AdventHealth Orlando
- · AdventHealth East Orlando
- · Orlando Health Dr. P. Phillips Hospital
Crash corridors
- · I-4 through downtown Orlando
- · SR 408 (East-West Expressway)
- · SR 417 (Central Florida GreeneWay)
- · John Young Parkway
When to escalate
These signs are not routine and warrant immediate physician contact or an ER visit.
- ·Saddle anesthesia, loss of bowel or bladder control (cauda equina — emergency)
- ·Progressive lower-extremity weakness or foot drop
- ·Unexplained weight loss, fever, or night pain (rule out infection or malignancy)
- ·History of trauma plus pain on percussion of the spine (rule out fracture)
PIP & MedPay for Orange County residents
PIP applies the same way in Orange County residents in a Florida-registered vehicle have access to Florida's $10,000 PIP benefit, which we bill directly. When the patient's auto policy includes MedPay, we bill MedPay as secondary. PT Near Me does not bill commercial health insurance — if PIP and MedPay are both exhausted before the plan of care is complete, we discuss options with the patient before continuing treatment.
Low Back Pain FAQ — Orlando
- Do I need an MRI before starting PT for back pain?
- For most uncomplicated mechanical low back pain, no. The ACP guideline and the Choosing Wisely campaign both recommend against routine imaging in the first 6 weeks unless red flags are present. Our DPTs screen for red flags at the evaluation and escalate to the referring physician if any are positive.
- Will bed rest help my back pain?
- More than 1–2 days of bed rest consistently makes outcomes worse. Modern guidelines favor early, graded activity within pain tolerance. Your DPT will set the dosage.
- Can I do PT at home if I can't bend over to put on socks?
- Yes — that's exactly the population in-home PT is built for. Your therapist brings every tool needed and works around your current mobility level, including treatment in bed or seated for the first few visits if necessary.
- Can you treat patients in the Medical City / Lake Nona area?
- Yes. Lake Nona is one of our highest-density Orlando submarkets, and our clinicians work across the Laureate Park, Nona Crest, and Eagle Creek communities, including in homes near the VA Medical Center and Nemours.
- Do you accept referrals from Orlando Health and AdventHealth physicians?
- Yes. We accept referrals from both systems and from independent orthopedic practices across the metro. Our reports return to the referring physician on a clinic-equivalent schedule.
References & clinical evidence
All statistics on this page are sourced from peer-reviewed journals, clinical practice guidelines, or U.S. government health agencies.
- [1]Low back pain — Global Burden of Disease findings— The Lancet Rheumatology, 2023
- [2]Low Back Pain Fact Sheet— NIH / NINDS
- [3]Noninvasive Treatments for Acute, Subacute, and Chronic Low Back Pain — ACP Clinical Practice Guideline— Annals of Internal Medicine, 2017
- [4]Association of Spinal Manipulative Therapy with Clinical Benefit and Harm for Acute Low Back Pain— JAMA, 2017
- [5]Treatment-Based Classification of Low Back Pain — revision— JOSPT, 2007
- [6]Low Back Pain — Clinical Practice Guidelines linked to ICF— JOSPT / APTA, 2012
- [7]Imaging for Low-Back Pain — Choosing Wisely / ACP— Choosing Wisely
Related reading
How Soon Should You Start PT After a Car Accident in Florida?
In Florida, the practical answer is within 14 days — both because the PIP statute requires initial care in that window and because the clinical evidence strongly favors early intervention for soft-tissue and cervical-spine injuries.
Mobile Physical Therapy: The In-Home PT Guide for Florida Patients
How mobile, in-home physical therapy actually works in Florida — from referral and first visit to discharge — and when it's the right level of care.
The Cost of In-Home Physical Therapy in Florida: PIP, MedPay, Cash, and What You Actually Pay
What in-home physical therapy actually costs Florida patients across PIP, MedPay, Medicare, and cash-pay — with realistic out-of-pocket ranges and the rules that decide which one applies to your case.
Get a Orlando low back pain patient seen at home — usually within 48 hours.
500+ Physical Therapists covering 35+ counties in Florida.
Our clinician network reaches major metros and rural communities alike — from the Panhandle to the Keys. If a patient is in a highlighted county, we can usually see them at home within 24–72 hours of intake.
- Clinicians in network
- 500+
- Florida counties covered
- 35+

