Rehab is where treatment turns into capacity
Exercise selection should match the missing piece: mobility, control, strength, tolerance, balance, or return-to-activity demand.
Physical rehabilitation and corrective exercise are the part of care that help change what the body can tolerate. Passive treatment can create a window, but rehab is usually where the long-term change has to be earned.
MPR uses the assessment to decide what kind of exercise matters. Some patients need mobility. Some need motor control. Some need strength. Some need balance, endurance, progressive loading, gait work, or a staged return to running, lifting, sport, or work demands.
Rehab may include corrective exercise, mobility work, strengthening, return-to-sport progressions, return-to-work progressions, home exercise, and practical load management. The plan should be clear enough that the patient knows what each exercise is trying to accomplish.
The endpoint is not a folder full of exercises. The endpoint is better movement, better capacity, fewer flare-ups, and a patient who understands how to keep progress going outside the clinic.