St. Petersburg · Pinellas County
Post-Fracture & Post-Cast Rehabilitation Physical Therapy in St. Petersburg, FL
In-home post-fracture rehab 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.

After a fracture — whether treated with a cast, a boot, a sling, or open reduction with internal fixation — the bone has usually healed by the time PT starts, but the surrounding soft tissue is significantly compromised. Immobilization produces predictable changes: muscle protein synthesis drops within 24 hours, and skeletal muscle mass can decline by roughly 0.5–1% per day during full disuse[1][2]. Joint capsule shortening, cartilage softening from unloading, and significant loss of proprioception follow. The job of post-fracture PT is to reverse these changes safely while respecting the surgeon's weight-bearing and ROM restrictions.
St. Petersburg residents dealing with post-fracture rehab after a crash share a common problem: outpatient PT clinics in Pinellas County are not located near where they actually live, and post-injury driving is exactly when commuting is least practical. Our model removes that step. A licensed Doctor of Physical Therapy comes to the patient's home — typically after the patient is referred from Bayfront Health St. Petersburg (Level II trauma) or one of the other Tampa Bay emergency departments — and delivers the same evidence-based protocol an outpatient clinic would use.
Symptoms we see in St. Petersburg patients
The window for restoring full function is wider than for soft-tissue injury — bone heals slowly — but the consequences of skipping rehab are larger. CDC data show roughly 1 in 4 adults age 65+ falls each year and falls cause about 95% of hip fractures, with one-year mortality after hip fracture in older adults ranging from 14–58% in the published literature[3][4]. Early progressive resistance training in hip fracture rehab improves function and reduces fall recurrence[5], and AAOS guidelines for distal radius and ankle fractures both endorse early supervised motion and progressive loading once stable[6].
- Marked loss of range of motion in the immobilized joint
- Visible muscle atrophy of the limb
- Swelling that persists after cast or boot removal
- Pain with initial weight-bearing or active motion
- Skin sensitivity or hypersensitivity over the fracture site
- Fear of re-injury (often the most limiting symptom)
Key data points
Sourced from peer-reviewed clinical practice guidelines and government health data. Click any figure for the underlying citation.
- 0.5–1%
daily muscle mass loss during full disuse
Source [2] - 1 in 4
U.S. adults 65+ fall each year (CDC)
Source [3] - ~95%
of hip fractures in older adults are caused by falls
Source [3] - 14–58%
1-year mortality after hip fracture in older adults
Source [4]
How in-home PT treats post-fracture rehab in St. Petersburg
Evaluation works directly from the orthopedic surgeon's post-op or post-cast orders: weight-bearing status, ROM restrictions, and any precautions specific to the fixation hardware. The DPT measures baseline ROM, manual muscle test grades (graded around the fracture site), swelling (circumferential measurement), and functional status (gait, transfers, ADLs). Falls-risk screening (Timed Up and Go, 30-second chair stand) is built into every lower-extremity post-fracture evaluation per CDC STEADI guidance[7].
Treatment starts with edema management (compression, elevation, retrograde massage), gentle joint mobilization within the surgeon's parameters, and isometric activation of the muscles around the fracture. As the surgeon clears progression, the program adds AROM, progressive resistance, weight-bearing progression (for lower extremity fractures), and finally proprioceptive and dynamic stability work[5]. Modalities — NMES, ice — are used selectively to support the active program.
A meaningful share of St. Pete intake calls are downtown professionals working from home post-injury — the kind of patient who can keep a laptop job going through a soft-tissue recovery but cannot reliably get to a 3 p.m. appointment across town. We schedule those patients before work, on lunch breaks, or in the early evening. For older patients in waterfront condos along Beach Drive or in Old Northeast, we focus on stair safety, single-leg balance, and post-fall reconditioning in the actual home environment.
Typical recovery timeline
Most post-fracture rehab runs 10 to 18 visits over 6 to 12 weeks. Distal radius and ankle fractures are on the shorter end; tibial plateau, calcaneus, and complex upper-extremity reconstructions are on the longer end. Without rehab after a lower-extremity fracture, older adults lose an average of 10–20% of their pre-fracture functional capacity[3].
Where St. Petersburg post-fracture rehab patients come from
I-275 through downtown St. Pete (especially the 4th Street and 22nd Avenue interchanges), the approach to the Howard Frankland, and the 34th Street corridor (US-19 south) are the dominant crash zones in our St. Petersburg case file. Central Avenue and the 1st Avenue North/South pair produce a steady volume of low-speed urban collisions during the lunch and after-work windows. Crash victims are most often transported to Bayfront Health St. Petersburg (Level II trauma) or to Northside Hospital for stable injuries.
Hospitals
- · Bayfront Health St. Petersburg (Level II trauma)
- · Northside Hospital
- · St. Anthony's Hospital
- · Palms of Pasadena Hospital
Crash corridors
- · I-275 through downtown St. Pete
- · 4th Street North
- · 34th Street (US-19)
- · Central Avenue
When to escalate
These signs are not routine and warrant immediate physician contact or an ER visit.
- ·Sudden increase in pain or new deformity (rule out hardware failure or non-union)
- ·Calf swelling, warmth, or tenderness (rule out DVT)
- ·Wound dehiscence, drainage, or increasing redness (rule out infection)
- ·Loss of distal pulse, color change, or new numbness in the limb
PIP & MedPay for Pinellas County residents
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.
Post-Fracture Rehab FAQ — St. Petersburg
- How soon after cast removal can PT start?
- Usually within 1–7 days. The longer the joint stays stiff after immobilization ends, the harder it is to recover full motion — early intervention matters.
- Will in-home PT work if I'm non-weight-bearing?
- Yes — and this is one of the most common reasons families call us. Driving to a clinic on crutches or in a wheelchair is logistically difficult; the DPT brings everything needed to your home.
- Do I need to bring x-rays to the evaluation?
- It helps if you have them, but it's not required. Our DPT communicates directly with the referring physician for surgical reports, weight-bearing orders, and follow-up imaging plans.
- I rent a downtown condo — does that change anything?
- No. We have visit logistics worked out for the major downtown towers including Signature Place, ONE St. Petersburg, Bayfront Tower, and Saltaire. The therapist signs in with the front desk and treats in the unit.
- How does in-home PT work for a patient who was a pedestrian, not a driver?
- We bill Florida PIP first, then MedPay if the auto policy includes it. PT Near Me does not bill commercial health insurance — if both are exhausted before the plan of care is complete, we discuss options with the patient before continuing treatment. The clinical care is delivered by a Florida-licensed Doctor of Physical Therapy in the patient's home.
References & clinical evidence
All statistics on this page are sourced from peer-reviewed journals, clinical practice guidelines, or U.S. government health agencies.
- [1]Disuse and Functional Atrophy — review— NIH / StatPearls, 2023
- [2]Disuse atrophy: mechanisms and rates of muscle loss— Current Opinion in Clinical Nutrition, 2009
- [3]Older Adult Falls Data — STEADI— CDC
- [4]Hip fracture mortality and outcomes — systematic review— Annals of Internal Medicine, 2010
- [5]High-intensity resistance training and home-based rehabilitation after hip fracture (RCT)— JAMA, 2002
- [6]AAOS Clinical Practice Guideline — Distal Radius Fractures— AAOS, 2020
- [7]STEADI — Older Adult Fall Prevention— CDC
Related reading
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.
What to Expect at Your First In-Home Physical Therapy Visit
A minute-by-minute breakdown of what happens at your first in-home physical therapy visit in Florida — what the therapist brings, how the evaluation works, and what you should have ready.
In-Home PT vs. Medicare Home Health: What's the Difference?
In-home physical therapy and Medicare home health both send a clinician to the patient's house, but they're regulated, billed, and clinically scoped very differently. After a Florida car accident, in-home PT is almost always the right fit — Medicare home health usually isn't an option at all.
Get a St. Petersburg post-fracture rehab 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
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