In my clinic at Orthomed Hospital in Hisar, I regularly see patients who have been taking diclofenac or some combination of NSAIDs for knee pain, back pain, or shoulder pain for months, sometimes years. The pain comes back the moment they stop the tablets. They have been managing symptoms, not treating the problem. This blog is my honest medical view on physiotherapy versus painkillers, as an orthopedic doctor who works with both every day.
Painkillers, whether over-the-counter NSAIDs like ibuprofen or prescription medications, work by reducing inflammation and blocking pain signals. They are genuinely useful and there are absolutely situations where they are the right tool. But they have one fundamental limitation: they do not fix the mechanical problem causing the pain.
If you have a knee that hurts because the muscles around it are weak and allow abnormal forces through the joint, a painkiller reduces your awareness of that problem. It does not strengthen those muscles. The joint continues to take abnormal load. The cartilage continues to wear. Over time, long-term NSAID use also carries real risks including gastrointestinal damage, kidney stress, and cardiovascular effects.
Physiotherapy works differently. A trained physiotherapist at Orthomed Hospital in Hisar assesses why you are in pain. Not just where, but why. Is your knee pain coming from weak quadriceps? Is your back pain driven by tight hip flexors and a weak core? Is your shoulder pain coming from poor scapular mechanics?
Once the cause is identified, physiotherapy builds a programme that addresses it directly. Targeted strengthening, stretching, manual therapy, electrotherapy, and movement re-education. Over 6 to 8 weeks, the underlying problem is addressed, not masked. This is why physiotherapy in Hisar at Orthomed produces results that last beyond the treatment period.
To be fair, there are situations where medication comes first or is essential alongside physiotherapy:
Physiotherapy quality varies enormously. At Orthomed Hospital, our physiotherapy and rehabilitation unit is directly integrated with our orthopedic team. This means your physiotherapist knows exactly what surgery you had, what your imaging shows, and what the surgeon’s goals are for your recovery. There is no gap between the medical team and the rehab team, which is where most treatment failures happen.
When looking for physiotherapy in Hisar, choose a centre where assessment is thorough, treatment is personalised rather than generic, and progress is tracked. Ultrasound on a knee without any assessment is not physiotherapy. It is time-passing.
At Orthomed Hospital in Hisar, we believe in physiotherapy first wherever it is appropriate. We are an orthopedic hospital that regularly tells patients they do not need surgery or a prescription. We refer to physiotherapy for joint pain treatment in Hisar because we have seen the outcomes. But we are equally honest when surgery or medication is genuinely needed. That balance, honesty over revenue, is what defines the care we provide.
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Orthomed Hospital, Sector 15 AP, Kaimri road, Hisar, Haryana- 125001