When a doctor recommends therapy for your child, the alphabet soup of acronyms can be overwhelming. Occupational therapy, physical therapy, speech therapy, ABA. Each addresses different aspects of development, and many children benefit from multiple types simultaneously. This guide explains what each therapy involves, which challenges it addresses, and how to determine what your child might need.
Key Takeaways
- Occupational therapy focuses on daily living skills, sensory processing, and fine motor development.
- Physical therapy addresses gross motor skills, balance, coordination, and strength.
- Speech therapy targets communication skills including speech sounds, language comprehension, and social communication. ABA focuses on behavior and skill acquisition.
Occupational Therapy: Building Skills for Daily Living
Occupational therapy (OT) for children focuses on the skills they need for daily life: dressing, eating, writing, playing, and participating in school routines. A pediatric OT helps children develop fine motor skills like buttoning buttons and holding a pencil. They address sensory processing challenges that make everyday sensations feel overwhelming or barely noticeable.
OT sessions often look like play but target specific developmental goals. Your child might swing in a therapeutic swing to develop balance and body awareness. They might play with putty or build with small blocks to strengthen hand muscles. They might navigate an obstacle course that challenges coordination and motor planning. The therapist designs activities that feel engaging while building targeted skills.
Common reasons for OT referrals include delayed fine motor skills, difficulty with self-care tasks like dressing and feeding, sensory processing challenges, poor handwriting, and difficulty with visual-motor skills like cutting with scissors or copying shapes. Many autistic children and children with ADHD benefit from OT to address sensory and motor challenges.
Physical Therapy: Building Strength and Coordination
Pediatric physical therapy (PT) addresses gross motor skills: crawling, walking, running, jumping, balancing, and coordinating large muscle groups. PTs work with children who have delays in reaching motor milestones, unusual gait patterns, low muscle tone, or conditions that affect movement like cerebral palsy or Down syndrome.
A PT session might include exercises to strengthen specific muscle groups, activities to improve balance and coordination, stretching to address tight muscles, and practice with functional movements like climbing stairs or getting up from the floor. Therapists use games, playground equipment, and therapeutic exercises to make sessions engaging.
Signs your child might benefit from PT include not meeting motor milestones on schedule, frequent tripping or falling, unusual walking or running patterns, difficulty keeping up with peers physically, avoiding physical activities, and complaints of pain during movement. Early intervention for motor delays prevents secondary issues like poor posture and joint problems.
Speech Therapy and ABA: Communication and Behavior
Speech-language pathology addresses all aspects of communication. This includes speech sounds, language comprehension, expressive language, social communication skills, and feeding and swallowing. A speech therapist helps children who are late talkers, have unclear speech, struggle to understand directions, or have difficulty with social conversation. They also support children who use augmentative communication devices.
Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) is a therapy approach that uses behavioral principles to teach skills and reduce challenging behaviors. ABA therapy breaks skills down into small steps and uses reinforcement to build those steps. It is most commonly associated with autism treatment, though it can address a wide range of behavioral and skill-building goals.
ABA is the most controversial therapy on this list. The autistic adult community has raised significant concerns about ABA practices that prioritize compliance and masking over authentic development and autonomy. If considering ABA, research different providers carefully. Look for providers who focus on skill-building, respect neurodiversity, and use child-led approaches rather than compliance-based methods.
When our OT said she would help my son learn to tie his shoes through play, I was skeptical. Three months later, he was tying shoes and asking to do therapy. The secret is that good pediatric therapy feels like playing. The work happens underneath the fun.
Physical therapy gave my daughter confidence. Before PT, she could not keep up with her friends on the playground. After a year of weekly sessions, she was climbing the same structures and beaming. That confidence spilled into every area of her life.
Research therapy options carefully, especially ABA. Listen to autistic adults about their experiences. The goal of any therapy should be to help your child thrive as themselves, not to make them appear more neurotypical.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know which therapy my child needs?
Start with your child's evaluation from a developmental pediatrician or a multidisciplinary team. The evaluation should identify specific areas of need and recommend appropriate therapies. If you are unsure, an occupational therapy evaluation is a good starting point because OTs address a broad range of foundational skills.
How often should my child attend therapy?
Frequency depends on the severity of challenges and the type of therapy. Typical recommendations range from once per week for mild delays to multiple sessions per week for significant needs. Your therapist will recommend a frequency based on their evaluation. Consistency matters more than intensity.
Does insurance cover pediatric therapy?
Many insurance plans cover medically necessary therapy. You will need a referral or prescription from your child's doctor. Check your insurance benefits for occupational, physical, and speech therapy coverage. Early intervention services through the state may be free or low-cost. School-based therapy through an IEP is provided at no cost.
Can I do therapy activities with my child at home?
Absolutely. Therapists should provide home programs with activities you can practice between sessions. Consistency between therapy and home amplifies progress. Ask your therapist to demonstrate activities and explain what skills each activity targets. A few minutes of daily practice is more effective than a weekly marathon session.
Final Thoughts
Pediatric therapy addresses specific developmental challenges through targeted, play-based interventions. Understanding what each type of therapy offers helps you make informed decisions about your child's care. Trust your instincts, ask questions, and look for therapists who collaborate with you as a partner. The right therapy, at the right intensity, at the right time, can transform your child's developmental trajectory.