The moment a doctor says “cerebral palsy,” the room goes quiet and your mind races. What does this mean for my child? What do I do now? Is this my fault? First: it is not your fault. Second: there is a clear path forward. This guide walks you through the most important first steps so you can move from fear to action, one step at a time.

The First Five Steps After a CP Diagnosis

In the days and weeks after diagnosis, focus on these five priorities:

1
Understand the specific diagnosis. Cerebral palsy is not one condition. It is a group of disorders classified by the type of movement problem (spastic, dyskinetic, ataxic, or mixed) and by which parts of the body are affected. Ask the diagnosing physician: What type of CP does my child have? What severity level? What does the brain MRI show? The more specific your understanding, the better you can plan.
2
Contact your state’s early intervention program immediately. Under federal law (IDEA Part C), every state must provide free early intervention services to children birth to age 3 who have developmental delays or conditions like CP. Services include physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, and developmental support. You do not need a physician referral to contact the program directly, and there is no income requirement.
3
Assemble your child’s medical team. Your child will likely benefit from a pediatric neurologist (ongoing brain health monitoring), a developmental pediatrician (overall development tracking), a physiatrist or rehabilitation physician (therapy coordination), an orthopedic specialist (bone and muscle alignment), and therapists in PT, OT, and speech. Not all of these are needed immediately, but establishing the core team early is important.
4
Gather and organize your child’s medical records. Request complete copies of your child’s birth records, brain MRI, EEG results, neonatal assessments, and any NICU documentation. These records are essential for care planning, therapy goals, and, if applicable, determining whether medical negligence during birth may have contributed to the diagnosis.
5
Give yourself permission to feel what you feel. Grief, anger, fear, guilt, and hope can all exist in the same hour. This is normal. You are not weak for struggling. Many parents find it helpful to connect with other CP families through support groups, both online and in person. Organizations like the Cerebral Palsy Foundation and United Cerebral Palsy offer resources and community connections.
You have time. A CP diagnosis does not require you to do everything at once. The most important thing right now is to start early intervention therapies and begin building your child’s care team. Everything else can come in stages as you learn more about your child’s specific needs.
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Understanding the Types of Cerebral Palsy

Knowing your child’s specific type of CP helps you understand what challenges they will face and what therapies will be most beneficial:

TypePrevalenceCharacteristicsCommon Cause
Spastic CP~80% of casesStiff, tight muscles. Difficulty with voluntary movement. Classified by area: hemiplegia (one side), diplegia (legs), quadriplegia (all four limbs).White matter injury, watershed injury, PVL
Dyskinetic CP~6% of casesInvoluntary, uncontrolled movements. Fluctuating muscle tone. Can affect speech and swallowing.Basal ganglia and thalamic injury (acute oxygen deprivation)
Ataxic CP~6% of casesProblems with balance, coordination, and depth perception. Shaky movements. Difficulty with precise motor tasks.Cerebellar injury
Mixed CP~8% of casesFeatures of more than one type, most commonly spastic and dyskinetic together.Widespread or multi-regional brain injury
1 in 345U.S. children with CP (CDC)
~80%Have spastic type
764KAmericans living with CP
Birth to 3Critical window for therapy

Why Early Intervention Matters So Much

The single most impactful thing you can do for your child right now is to start therapies early. Research published in JAMA Pediatrics (Novak et al., 2017) and Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology (Morgan et al., 2016) has consistently shown that earlier and more intensive intervention leads to measurably better outcomes for children with cerebral palsy.

The reason is neuroplasticity: the infant and toddler brain has a remarkable capacity to reorganize itself, creating new neural pathways to compensate for damaged areas. This capacity is greatest in the first 2 to 3 years of life, which is why the early intervention window is so critical.

Key therapies include:

  • Physical therapy (PT): Focuses on gross motor skills, including head control, sitting, crawling, standing, and walking. PT also addresses strength, flexibility, and posture. For children with spastic CP, stretching and strengthening programs help manage tightness and prevent contractures.
  • Occupational therapy (OT): Focuses on fine motor skills, hand function, self-care tasks (feeding, dressing), and sensory processing. OT helps your child become as independent as possible in daily activities.
  • Speech and language therapy: Addresses communication, feeding, and swallowing. For children whose speech is significantly affected, speech therapists introduce augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) systems, such as communication boards or speech-generating devices.
You do not have to wait for a formal CP diagnosis to start therapy. If your child has a known brain injury (HIE, IVH, PVL) or is showing signs of developmental delay, your state’s early intervention program can begin services based on the diagnosis of risk. Do not wait for the CP label to start.

Your Child’s Legal Rights to Services

Federal law guarantees your child’s right to early intervention and, later, to educational services:

  • IDEA Part C (Birth to Age 3): The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act requires every state to provide early intervention services to eligible children at no cost to families. Your child qualifies automatically with a CP diagnosis. Services are delivered in the “natural environment,” which typically means your home or a community setting.
  • IDEA Part B (Ages 3 to 21): When your child turns 3, they transition to the school system’s special education services. This includes an Individualized Education Program (IEP) that outlines the specific supports and therapies your child will receive in school.
  • Supplemental Security Income (SSI): Children with cerebral palsy may qualify for monthly SSI payments, which also provide automatic Medicaid eligibility in most states. Medicaid covers many therapy services, assistive devices, and medical equipment.
Important: Do not wait for the system to come to you. Contact your state’s early intervention program directly. If you are unsure how to reach them, ask your pediatrician or search “[your state] early intervention program” online. The sooner your child is enrolled, the sooner therapies can begin.
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Was My Child’s Cerebral Palsy Caused by a Birth Injury?

Not all cerebral palsy is caused by events during birth. CP can result from genetic conditions, prenatal brain abnormalities, infections during pregnancy, or complications of prematurity. However, a significant proportion of CP cases result from oxygen deprivation (birth asphyxia) during labor or delivery that leads to hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE).

Signs that your child’s CP may be connected to birth injury include:

  • Your baby required resuscitation at birth or had low Apgar scores
  • Your baby was admitted to the NICU after delivery
  • Your baby received therapeutic hypothermia (cooling therapy)
  • Your baby’s brain MRI shows a pattern of acute injury (basal ganglia, watershed, or widespread damage)
  • There were complications during labor such as fetal distress, cord problems, placental abruption, or a delayed cesarean delivery
  • Your baby was diagnosed with HIE before the CP diagnosis

If any of these apply, the oxygen deprivation that caused your child’s brain injury may have been preventable. Common medical errors include failure to monitor fetal heart rate patterns, delayed emergency cesarean when fetal distress was present, improper use of delivery instruments, mismanagement of cord or placental complications, and failure to initiate cooling therapy within 6 hours.

A free, confidential case review examines the complete birth record to determine whether errors in care contributed to the injury. If negligence is found, compensation from a birth injury case can fund your child’s lifetime care, including therapy, equipment, home modifications, educational support, and future medical needs.

Processing the Emotional Weight of This Diagnosis

It is important to acknowledge that a cerebral palsy diagnosis changes the picture you had of your child’s future. Grief for the life you imagined is real and valid. So is the anger you may feel if you suspect something went wrong during birth. And so is the hope you may feel when you see your child respond to therapy, reach a new milestone, or simply smile at you.

These emotions do not cancel each other out. They coexist, sometimes in the same breath. Here are some things that may help:

  • Connect with other CP families. Online communities, local support groups, and organizations like the Cerebral Palsy Foundation offer spaces where parents share experiences, resources, and encouragement. Knowing you are not alone is powerful.
  • Take care of yourself. Caring for a child with CP is a long journey. Your own physical and mental health matter. Accepting help, setting boundaries, and seeking counseling when needed are not signs of weakness.
  • Focus on your child, not the label. Your child is the same person they were before the diagnosis. The label gives you a framework for getting support, but it does not define your child’s potential, personality, or value.
  • Celebrate progress, not perfection. Every milestone your child reaches, no matter how small it may seem in comparison to typical development charts, is a victory worth celebrating.
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