Interactive course in the Fluedy app
German for Physiotherapy
Treatment plans, patient instructions, and professional communication for PTs.
Every unit is a guided lesson in the app — listening, speaking, AI corrections, and saved progress. This is not a video course or a PDF download.
How it works
This course runs inside the Fluedy app
Use Fluedy on iPhone, iPad, or Android. Open the course, tap a unit, and learn by doing — with instant feedback when you speak or write.
Download Fluedy
Install free from the App Store or Google Play.
Open your course
Find this course in the app library and start with unit 1.
Play each unit
Interactive exercises, dialogs, and speaking tasks — all in one app.
What You Will Learn
Practical skills you can use from day one.
Assessment & diagnosis language
Conduct initial assessments and describe findings precisely.
Patient instruction patterns
Guide exercises and movements with clear, confident German.
Treatment documentation
Write treatment plans and progress notes that meet professional standards.
Interdisciplinary communication
Coordinate with doctors, nurses, and insurance providers.
Course curriculum
22 units in this course
Each line below is a playable chapter in the app. After you sign up, open Fluedy, select this course, and start unit 1 for free.
Your first patient
Initial consultation structure
Body parts and movement
Anatomical vocabulary in practice
Pain description
Scales, location, and quality
Range of motion assessment
Testing and documenting ROM
Treatment plan basics
Goals, methods, frequency
What it looks like in the app
Units are short, interactive lessons — not long videos. You listen, speak, write, and get corrections as you go.
What learners say
Real stories from people who studied this material in the app.
“The exercise instruction module changed everything. My patients actually understand me now.”
🇮🇳 Priya
Physiotherapist, 29
“Writing treatment plans in German felt impossible before this course. Now it's routine.”
🇧🇷 Carlos
PT student, 26
“I practiced every unit twice. The vocabulary finally stuck because the scenarios felt real.”
🇻🇳 Anh
Physiotherapist, 31

