Golden Period Stroke
The First Months After Stroke: What to Rehabilitate and How to Continue
Early recovery often progresses fastest—but there is no six-month deadline
Early months
Golden Period
Recovery may be faster
24–48 hours
after stroke, when appropriate
Begin short, safe rehabilitation once medically stable
Multiple domains
should be assessed
according to individual needs
363,000
Source-listed annual
stroke cases in Thailand
Golden Period Stroke refers to the early recovery period after stroke, when spontaneous recovery and responsiveness to practice may be greater. It is not a strict six-month window, and neuroplastic change can continue later. This article explains the main rehabilitation domains, selected adjuncts, and how to continue meaningful practice and support at home.
What it means 2. What to
rehabilitate 3. Selected
adjuncts 4. Continuing
at home 5. Checklist
Choosing a rehabilitation service 6. FAQ
Frequently asked questions

What Does the “Golden Period” After Stroke Mean—and Why Start Early?
Brief answer: The first weeks and months after stroke are often an important period for recovery, but there is no evidence-based point at six months when neuroplasticity stops. Rehabilitation should begin when the person is medically stable and able to participate, and it should continue for as long as needs and meaningful goals remain.
After stroke, recovery reflects several processes, including resolution of acute effects, spontaneous biological recovery, learning, compensation, and experience-dependent neuroplasticity. Improvement is often faster early on, but gains can continue for months or years. Timing, dose, task relevance, health status, fatigue, mood, cognition, and access to skilled rehabilitation all influence outcomes.
First 1–3 months
Many people show faster change during this period, although the pattern varies widely. Early, task-specific and needs-led rehabilitation can help build function and independence.
Months 4–6
Progress may continue and goals should be reviewed. Rehabilitation should not be reduced simply because a calendar milestone has been reached.
After 6 months
Meaningful improvement may still occur. Some people need further rehabilitation, adaptation, assistive technology, self-management support, or periodic review.
What Should Stroke Rehabilitation Address?
Brief answer: Rehabilitation should address the person’s actual impairments, activities, participation goals, safety, and preferences. This may include movement, daily activities, communication, swallowing, cognition, mood, vision, sensation, fatigue, pain, continence, work, and community participation—not necessarily every domain at the same time.

| Domain | Possible goals | Professionals who may be involved |
|---|---|---|
| Physical therapy (PT) | Mobility, transfers, balance, walking, fitness, upper- and lower-limb function, and management of secondary problems | Licensed physical therapist, with medical or rehabilitation input when indicated |
| Occupational therapy (OT) | Daily activities, upper-limb use, cognition, equipment, routines, home and work adaptation | Occupational therapist |
| Communication and swallowing | Speech, language, communication, and dysphagia assessment or treatment | Speech and language therapist or another clinician specifically trained in dysphagia, as appropriate |
| Cognition and memory | Attention, memory, planning, problem-solving, perception, and strategies for everyday tasks | Occupational therapist, psychologist or neuropsychologist, and other relevant team members |
| Emotional health | Screening and support for depression, anxiety, adjustment, motivation, relationships, and caregiver wellbeing | Mental-health professional and the wider stroke team |
“In clinical practice, starting rehabilitation early can be valuable, but outcomes are not determined by a three- or six-month deadline. The most useful plan is individualized, progressive, meaningful to the person, and reviewed as health, goals, and tolerance change.”
Anecha Horasart, PT — Licence No. 9685
MSc Physical Therapy, Mahidol University · KIN reports more than 10 years of stroke experience · Featured as a Mahidol University alumnus by NSTDA (2022)
Selected Technologies and Adjuncts in Stroke Rehabilitation
Brief answer: Technology may support selected rehabilitation goals, but no device replaces skilled, task-specific, repetitive practice. Evidence, suitability, risks, access, and expected benefit vary, so any adjunct should be considered within an individualized multidisciplinary plan.
Repetitive TMS is a non-invasive brain-stimulation technique studied as an adjunct for selected post-stroke problems. Effects vary by target, protocol, timing, and patient characteristics, and it should not be described as directly creating new neural pathways or guaranteeing recovery.
Use only after appropriate specialist assessment and alongside core rehabilitation
TM
An aquatic treadmill can reduce weight-bearing to a degree that varies with water depth, body composition, posture, and equipment. It may support selected gait and balance goals, but the person must be medically stable and able to enter, exit, and exercise safely.
May suit selected people with gait or balance goals
DR
Warm-water therapy may help comfort, movement practice, balance, or temporary relaxation for some people. It does not reliably eliminate spasticity and requires screening for cardiovascular, respiratory, skin, continence, cognitive, seizure, transfer, and infection risks.
May suit selected people after individual safety assessment
HBOT is not an established routine treatment or standard indication for stroke rehabilitation. Claims that it repairs injured brain tissue or improves recovery should not be made outside an appropriate clinical or research context.
Do not present as standard stroke rehabilitation
After Center-Based Rehabilitation—How Should Recovery Continue at Home?
Brief answer: Home practice can support rehabilitation when it is safe, meaningful, and based on a plan taught by the clinical team. Rest, sleep, pacing, and recovery are also important. The right balance between professional sessions, self-directed practice, daily activity, and rest differs for each person.

Neuroplastic change is supported by meaningful repetition, but more is not always better. Long periods of inactivity may contribute to deconditioning, while excessive practice can worsen fatigue, pain, frustration, or safety. Home activities should be relevant to agreed goals, progressed gradually, and stopped or modified when warning signs occur.
Days with professional rehabilitation
Therapy may include PT, OT, speech and language therapy, psychology, nursing, or selected adjuncts according to assessed need—not a fixed three-to-five-day schedule for everyone.
Days at home
Continue safe daily activities and the individualized home programme, with support from family or paid caregivers only after they have been trained.
Home services that may support ongoing rehabilitation
Checklist—What Should a Good Stroke Rehabilitation Service Provide?
Brief answer: A good service should offer qualified staff, individualized assessment, meaningful goals, appropriate therapy dose, outcome measurement, safety systems, caregiver involvement, and a plan for community participation and follow-up. Expensive technology or a single “complete” package is not a substitute for these fundamentals.

Clinical and rehabilitation team
Technology and equipment
Continuity of care
Written by
Anecha Horasart
Licensed Physical Therapist · Licence No. 9685
Master of Science in Physical Therapy, Mahidol University · KIN reports more than 10 years of stroke experience
Featured as a Mahidol University alumnus by NSTDA (2022) · Physical therapist at KIN Rehabilitation & Homecare
Frequently Asked Questions—Answered by the KIN Team
What is the “Golden Period” after stroke?
It is an informal term for the early months when recovery may progress more quickly. It is not a six-month deadline, and neuroplastic change and functional improvement can continue later.
How soon should rehabilitation begin after stroke?
Rehabilitation begins in hospital and should start when medically appropriate. Mobility work often uses frequent, short sessions beginning around 24–48 hours after onset when possible, while very early high-dose mobilisation is not routinely recommended. After discharge, follow the individual transition and follow-up plan rather than a fixed one- or two-week rule.
Are TMS and aquatic treadmill suitable for everyone?
No. Suitability depends on the person’s stroke, goals, medical stability, cognition, communication, seizure risk, cardiovascular and respiratory status, skin and infection risk, transfer ability, and the evidence for the specific intervention.
Can recovery continue after six months?
Yes. Recovery may continue for months or years. The pace varies, and later progress may involve restoration, compensation, assistive technology, environmental adaptation, fitness, participation, or new goals.
How can home care support stroke rehabilitation?
Home services may support safe task practice, daily routines, caregiver training, nursing needs, and environmental adaptation. They should follow an individualized plan and complement—not replace—the required professional rehabilitation.
How much does KIN stroke rehabilitation cost?
The source lists a comprehensive Stroke Recovery Package from THB 71,000 and home PT from THB 1,500 per visit. Confirm current inclusions, therapy hours, disciplines, session length, eligibility, travel, accommodation, expiry, cancellation, and exclusions before booking.