PelvicForm, by Return to Form Physio
Postnatal pelvic floor physiotherapy at PelvicForm in Ponsonby, Auckland

Postnatal recovery · Ponsonby

Postnatal physio Auckland: recovery after birth

Postnatal physio helps your pelvic floor and core recover after having a baby, whether that was six weeks or six years ago. We assess what is actually going on and give you a clear plan, and many birth injuries are covered by ACC.

When to come in after birth

You can book a postnatal assessment from around six weeks, once any bleeding has settled, and it is never too late. We see people in their first months postpartum and others years down the track who were never told this kind of help existed. Either way, an assessment is worthwhile.

What a postnatal assessment covers

A thorough one-hour assessment: how your pelvic floor is activating (using real-time ultrasound, and an internal exam only ever with your consent), any abdominal separation, your breathing and posture, and any scar tissue. You leave with a clear plan and a take-home guide, not a generic exercise sheet.

Diastasis recti (abdominal separation)

Some separation of the tummy muscles is normal in pregnancy, and for many it improves on its own. When it does not, the right loading and breathing strategy makes a real difference. We assess the gap properly and build the plan around it, rather than handing you generic core exercises that can sometimes make it worse.

Prolapse, bladder and bowel changes

Leaking when you cough, laugh or run, a heavy or dragging feeling, or urgency you cannot hold are common after birth, and they usually improve with the right plan. These are treatable. You do not have to live with them, and contracting your pelvic floor too hard too early can actually slow healing, which is why an assessment first matters.

Returning to exercise and running

Going back to running or the gym too soon, or with a pelvic floor that is not ready, is a common cause of leaks and pain. We guide a staged return, usually building over about twelve weeks, so you get back to what you love without setbacks.

ACC cover for birth injuries

Since 1 October 2022, ACC covers a range of maternal birth injuries, and we lodge the claim for you. If your birth involved a tear, prolapse or other covered injury, your treatment may be funded. Give us a call and we will tell you what is covered.

FAQs

Common questions

When can I start postnatal physio?+
Usually from around six weeks, once any bleeding has settled, though it is never too late to come in. An internal exam, if helpful, waits until you are ready.
Is postnatal physio covered by ACC?+
Often. Since 1 October 2022 ACC covers a range of maternal birth injuries, and we lodge the claim for you. Call us and we will tell you what is funded.
What does a postnatal assessment involve?+
A one-hour assessment of your pelvic floor (with real-time ultrasound, and an internal exam only with your consent), abdominal separation, breathing and posture, plus a clear plan and take-home guide.
Can you help with abdominal separation (diastasis recti)?+
Yes. We assess the separation properly and build a loading and breathing plan around it, rather than generic core work that can sometimes make it worse.

Your clinicians

Physiotherapists who specialise in pelvic health

You'll be seen by a named, registered pelvic floor physiotherapist who knows your case, not a different stranger each visit. Registered with the Physiotherapy Board of New Zealand, no referral needed to start, and we lodge ACC claims for maternal birth injuries.

Have a question first?

Get in touch, discreetly

Pelvic health is personal. Send a message and we will come back to you privately, within one business day.

Discreet. No referral needed to get in touch.

Reclaim your everyday freedom

Your recovery starts with a comprehensive 1-hour assessment. Discreet, thorough, and on your terms. No referral needed.