In France, pelvic floor rehabilitation after childbirth is standard — covered by national health insurance and offered to every new mother. In the United States, most women are sent home at 6 weeks postpartum with a "you're cleared" and no mention of the pelvic floor. We can do better. Here's what postpartum pelvic floor PT is, why it matters, and what you can expect.

Common ≠ Normal: Postpartum Symptoms That Deserve PT

Many women accept the following symptoms as an inevitable part of having a baby. They're not:

The most important message in this article: These symptoms are common — but they are not normal, not inevitable, and not something you have to accept as a new reality. Pelvic floor physical therapy addresses all of them.

What Pregnancy and Childbirth Do to the Pelvic Floor

The pelvic floor is a group of muscles, ligaments, and connective tissues forming a hammock at the base of your pelvis. They support the bladder, uterus, and rectum; control urinary and bowel function; and play a key role in sexual function and core stability.

During pregnancy, the pelvic floor endures:

During vaginal delivery, the pelvic floor stretches to approximately 3× its normal length. During pushing, the levator ani (primary pelvic floor muscle) can experience forces equivalent to a third-degree muscle strain. C-section, while avoiding vaginal delivery, still involves 9 months of pregnancy-related pelvic floor loading — plus abdominal scar tissue that can restrict core and pelvic function.

1 in 3
women experience urinary incontinence after childbirth — yet fewer than 25% seek treatment, often believing it's "just part of having kids"

Understanding Diastasis Recti

Diastasis recti (DR) is a separation of the two halves of the rectus abdominis along the linea alba (midline connective tissue). It's present in approximately 100% of women at 35 weeks of pregnancy, and in about 39% of women at 6 months postpartum.

Signs of diastasis recti:

Diastasis recti is not just a cosmetic issue. The linea alba provides crucial tension transfer between the abdominal wall, pelvis, and spine. When it's compromised, load management throughout the core suffers.

Avoid these exercises with untreated diastasis recti: crunches, sit-ups, double leg raises, heavy deadlifts, or any exercise that causes midline doming. These can worsen the separation. A pelvic floor PT will create a safe, progressive plan.

What Pelvic Floor PT Involves

A pelvic floor PT evaluation is thorough, respectful, and focused. Here's what to expect:

1
Comprehensive History

Your therapist will ask about your pregnancy, labor, delivery (vaginal vs. C-section, tears/episiotomy, pushing duration), current symptoms, goals, and prior exercise history. There are no awkward or off-limits topics — this is a clinical conversation.

2
Postural and Movement Assessment

External assessment of posture, breathing mechanics, abdominal wall (diastasis check), hip mobility, and functional movements like squatting and lifting.

3
Internal Pelvic Floor Assessment (with consent)

A gentle internal examination assesses pelvic floor muscle tone, strength, coordination, and tenderness. This is always performed with full explanation and consent — you control the pace. The exam informs the treatment plan directly.

4
Individualized Treatment Plan

Based on findings, your therapist designs a program addressing your specific deficits — whether that's a weak pelvic floor, a hypertonic (too tight) pelvic floor, diastasis recti, scar tissue, or a combination.

5
Treatment and Home Program

Sessions include hands-on manual therapy, targeted exercises, breathing coordination, and progressive loading. Your home program extends your gains between visits.

Why Kegels Alone Are Not Enough

The first advice most postpartum women receive is "do your Kegels." While Kegel exercises (pelvic floor contractions) are valuable — they're not the right intervention for every woman, and they're rarely sufficient on their own.

In fact, approximately 30–40% of postpartum women have a hypertonic (too tight) pelvic floor — where the muscles are in a chronic state of tension rather than weakness. For these women, Kegels can worsen pain, urgency, and pressure symptoms. They need relaxation and downtraining — the opposite of Kegels.

A pelvic floor PT assessment identifies whether your primary issue is weakness, tightness, or poor coordination — and tailors the treatment accordingly. This is why one-size-fits-all advice can fall short.

Returning to Exercise After Baby

One of the most common postpartum questions: "When can I run/lift/do CrossFit again?" The 6-week clearance your OB gives you is a medical clearance — it doesn't mean your pelvic floor and core are ready for high-impact exercise.

ActivityGeneral Readiness TimelinePT Guidance
Walking (short)1–2 weeks postpartumStart with 10 min, progress gradually
SwimmingAfter incision/perineum healed (~6 wks)Excellent low-impact option
Yoga / Pilates (gentle)6–8 weeks with PT guidanceAvoid inversions and heavy core initially
Cycling (stationary)8–10 weeksMonitor perineal comfort
Running12 weeks minimum (often 16+)Pass pelvic floor screening first
Heavy lifting / CrossFit16–20 weeks with PT clearanceRequires core load tolerance testing
High-impact sports20+ weeksFull pelvic floor and core assessment required

Ready to Reclaim Your Body After Baby?

EverStrong Physical Therapy provides comprehensive pelvic floor rehabilitation in Kingsport, TN. No referral needed — schedule your postpartum assessment today.

Book Postpartum Assessment (423) 367-7670

Frequently Asked Questions

You can typically begin pelvic floor PT as early as 6 weeks postpartum after vaginal delivery, or 8 weeks after C-section — once cleared by your OB or midwife. Some gentle breathing and pelvic awareness exercises can begin even sooner. Many women also benefit from a pelvic floor assessment during pregnancy to prepare for labor and recovery.

Leaking urine (urinary incontinence) is common after childbirth — but it is NOT normal or inevitable. It signals that the pelvic floor muscles and/or connective tissues were affected by pregnancy or delivery and need rehabilitation. Pelvic floor PT can resolve postpartum incontinence in the vast majority of cases, often within 6–12 sessions.

Diastasis recti is a separation of the rectus abdominis (six-pack) muscles along the midline of the abdomen, common during and after pregnancy. PT addresses it through targeted core rehabilitation that restores tension in the linea alba without worsening the separation — avoiding exercises like crunches and sit-ups until the gap has closed sufficiently. Most cases respond well to a structured 8–16 week program.

SM
Dr. Sarah Mitchell, DPT, OCS
Doctor of Physical Therapy · 12 Years Experience · Orthopedic Certified Specialist

Dr. Mitchell is passionate about helping women reclaim their strength and confidence after childbirth. She brings 12 years of clinical expertise to postpartum rehabilitation at EverStrong Physical Therapy, with particular focus on pelvic floor restoration, diastasis recti management, and safe return-to-exercise programming.