If your child has hemiplegic cerebral palsy, affecting one side of the body, you have probably noticed that they avoid using their weaker hand. They reach with the stronger side, stabilize with their body instead of their arm, and over time, the gap between the two sides grows wider. Constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT) is designed to close that gap, and the research behind it is strong.

What Is CIMT?

Constraint-induced movement therapy is an evidence-based rehabilitation approach that restricts the use of the stronger (unaffected) hand using a cast, splint, or specialized mitt while providing intensive, structured training of the weaker (affected) hand. The goal is to overcome a phenomenon called developmental disregard or learned non-use: over time, the child’s brain stops trying to use the affected hand because it is more difficult, and this disuse further weakens the neural pathways that control it.

CIMT breaks this cycle by removing the easier option. When the stronger hand is restrained, the brain is forced to engage the weaker hand, and with intensive, repetitive practice, new neural pathways strengthen and functional hand use improves.

The neuroscience behind CIMT. CIMT is grounded in the principle of neuroplasticity, the brain’s ability to reorganize itself by forming new connections. A 2015 review in Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology confirmed that intensive, task-specific practice drives cortical reorganization in children with hemiplegic CP. CIMT harnesses this by providing exactly that: intensive, repetitive use of the affected limb.

Who Is a Good Candidate for CIMT?

CIMT is most appropriate for children who meet the following general criteria:

  • Hemiplegic (one-sided) cerebral palsy with one hand significantly more affected than the other
  • Some voluntary movement in the affected hand, including the ability to initiate grasp and release (even partial)
  • Age typically between 1 and 12 years, though some programs treat older children and adolescents
  • Cognitive ability to engage in structured play-based activities (with appropriate support)
  • No uncontrolled seizures or medical conditions that would make restraint unsafe

Your child’s occupational therapist can perform a formal assessment to determine whether CIMT is appropriate. Not every child with hemiplegic CP is a candidate, and that is okay. Alternative approaches like bimanual therapy (HABIT) may be recommended instead.

What Does a CIMT Program Look Like?

Traditional CIMT

The original protocol involves wearing a restraint (usually a cast or long arm splint) on the stronger hand for most waking hours while receiving 3 to 6 hours of structured therapy daily for 2 to 4 weeks. Therapy sessions are play-based and tailored to the child’s age, interests, and functional goals. Activities include feeding tasks, stacking and building, art projects, dressing practice, and games that require the affected hand to grasp, release, manipulate, and stabilize.

Modified CIMT (mCIMT)

Modified CIMT uses shorter restraint periods (typically 1 to 2 hours per day) with structured practice that can be partly delivered at home under therapist guidance. Research suggests mCIMT produces comparable functional improvements and may be more practical and less stressful for younger children and families who cannot access intensive clinic-based programs.

FeatureTraditional CIMTModified CIMT
Restraint durationMost waking hours1 to 2 hours per day
Therapy intensity3 to 6 hours daily1 to 2 hours daily
Program length2 to 4 weeks4 to 10 weeks
SettingClinic or camp-basedClinic + home
Evidence levelStrong (multiple RCTs)Good (growing evidence)
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What the Research Says

CIMT is one of the most studied interventions for upper limb function in children with hemiplegic cerebral palsy:

  • A 2014 systematic review in Physical Therapy (Chen et al.) found that CIMT produces significant improvements in affected hand use, grip strength, and the quality of bimanual (two-handed) activities.
  • A 2014 randomized clinical trial (Eliasson et al.) in DMCN demonstrated that children who received CIMT showed greater improvement in hand function than those receiving standard occupational therapy.
  • Benefits are maintained for at least 6 to 12 months after the intensive period, and longer when families continue a structured home practice program.
  • CIMT appears most effective when started early, when the brain’s neuroplasticity is greatest, though improvements have been documented in older children as well.

What to Expect: The Emotional Side

CIMT is intensive, and the first few days can be emotionally challenging for both the child and the parent. Your child may feel frustrated, and you may feel guilty for watching them struggle with tasks that their stronger hand would handle easily. This is normal.

Skilled CIMT therapists are trained to manage frustration through carefully graded activities, frequent breaks, motivating rewards, and constant encouragement. Most families report that by day 3 or 4, their child has adapted to the restraint, and by the end of the program, the functional gains are visible and meaningful.

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Finding a CIMT Program

CIMT is offered at many children’s hospitals, university-affiliated rehabilitation centers, and specialized outpatient clinics. Some programs operate as intensive “camps” during summer months. When evaluating a program, ask about the therapist’s CIMT training and experience, the specific protocol used (traditional vs. modified), the child-to-therapist ratio, how progress is measured, and whether a home program is provided for after the intensive period.

Your child’s pediatric neurologist, physiatrist, or occupational therapist can provide referrals to reputable CIMT programs in your area.

CIMT is not the only option. For children who are not candidates for CIMT, or whose goals involve two-handed activities more than single-hand use, HABIT (Hand-Arm Bimanual Intensive Training) is an evidence-based alternative that trains both hands to work together. Your child’s therapist can help determine which approach best fits your child’s needs.
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