Cerebral Palsy
When an early brain injury affects movement and posture.
A short film of what happens — no sound needed.
What's happening
Cerebral palsy comes from an injury to the developing brain, early in life.
It affects movement and posture. The injury itself does not get worse — but how it affects daily life can change as a child grows.
It looks different for every child. What does not change: early, steady, family-led work shapes the path.
Cerebral palsy is lifelong, but ability is not fixed. With early, consistent work, children keep surprising everyone.
What you may see at home
- Reaching movement milestones late — sitting, crawling, walking
- Tightness, often in the calves and hamstrings
- Using one side of the body much more than the other
- Difficulty with speech or feeding
- Tiring quickly with movement
A parent's concern is always worth taking seriously. An early assessment clarifies the picture and starts the right help.
How we help
- 1We set goals around what your child wants to do — play, school, daily life.
- 2We use play-based therapy woven into everyday routines.
- 3We coach parents, so the helpful work continues every day, not just in sessions.
- 4We work as a long-term partner alongside your child's other doctors.
What getting better looks like
Infancy and early years
Play-based work to build movement milestones, when the brain is most adaptable.
Childhood
Steady work narrows the gap between what is expected and what your child can do.
Into adulthood
The focus shifts to function, independence and taking part fully in life.
Cerebral palsy is lifelong. We are honest about that — and honest that early, consistent work changes the trajectory, year by year.
Your next step
Talk to us about cerebral palsyNo cost, no pressure. We will tell you honestly if we can help.