After NICU discharge, the next two years of an HIE baby’s life are a series of structured follow-up appointments: pediatrician, pediatric neurology, NICU follow-up clinic, Early Intervention. Each visit has a purpose; each one fits a specific window in development. This guide is a workflow map: which appointments matter most, what each one assesses, what to bring, and how to make sure your child gets the evaluations they need at the right times.

The Four Tracks of Follow-Up

Most HIE babies have follow-up running along four parallel tracks:

  1. Pediatric primary care. The pediatrician you saw weekly at first and now see for routine well-baby visits.
  2. Pediatric neurology. Follow-up for any seizures, anticonvulsant management, neurological exam, MRI follow-up.
  3. NICU follow-up clinic (high-risk infant follow-up). Multidisciplinary developmental assessments at structured ages.
  4. Early Intervention services. Home-based or community-based therapy from birth to age 3.

These tracks complement each other. Each looks at a different aspect of your child’s development. Coordinated care across all four is the goal.

Track 1: Pediatric Primary Care

The pediatrician handles routine well-baby care: weight, length, head circumference, immunizations, common infections, feeding questions, and the day-to-day issues of infancy. For HIE babies specifically, the pediatrician is also the front line for noticing developmental concerns and coordinating with specialists.

Typical schedule:

  • 1-3 days after discharge.
  • Weekly to bi-weekly for the first month if any concerns about feeding or weight.
  • Standard well-baby visits at 2 weeks, 1, 2, 4, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, and 24 months.
  • As-needed visits for illness or new concerns.

Bring the discharge summary to the first visit; many pediatricians have not yet received the full report from the NICU. Subsequent visits go more smoothly when the pediatrician knows your child’s history.

Track 2: Pediatric Neurology

The pediatric neurologist tracks the brain-specific aspects of HIE recovery. The first neurology visit is usually within 1 to 4 weeks of discharge, with subsequent visits at structured intervals or as needed.

Typical schedule:

  • 1-4 weeks post-discharge: initial visit; review NICU course, MRI findings, medications.
  • 3 months, 6 months, 12 months, 18 months, 24 months: structured follow-up.
  • Additional visits if seizures recur, anticonvulsants are being weaned, or new concerns arise.
  • EEG repeat if recommended (often before discontinuing anticonvulsants).
  • Repeat MRI if recommended (typically not routine, but may be obtained later in infancy or childhood).

The neurologist also evaluates tone, posture, reflexes, and primitive reflex retention, which are early indicators of motor abnormalities.

Track 3: NICU Follow-Up Clinic

This is the most distinctive part of HIE follow-up. Most regional NICUs run multidisciplinary clinics specifically for graduates, with visits at structured ages and standardized assessments.

Visit AgeTypical AssessmentsWhat’s Being Looked For
4-8 weeksInitial post-discharge check; growth; feeding; toneStability after discharge; emerging tone abnormalities
3-5 monthsGeneral Movements Assessment (GMA)Absence of fidgety movements (predicts CP)
8-12 monthsHammersmith Infant Neurological Examination (HINE); AIMSMotor abnormalities; emerging asymmetry
18-24 monthsBayley Scales of Infant DevelopmentCognitive, language, motor, social-emotional development
3-5 yearsWPPSI; standardized motor and language assessmentsPre-school cognitive and learning profile
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The General Movements Assessment (GMA)

The GMA is a video-based observation of spontaneous movement at 3 to 5 months corrected age. Healthy infants at this age show characteristic small, elegant ‘fidgety’ movements throughout the body. Their absence is one of the strongest predictors of cerebral palsy. The GMA can be performed in clinic or via parent-uploaded video. Novak and colleagues (2017, JAMA Pediatrics) demonstrated that the GMA, combined with brain MRI and HINE, identifies CP risk by 5-6 months with high accuracy, well before traditional milestone-based diagnosis.

The Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination (HINE)

HINE is a standardized neurological exam for infants 2-24 months, scored across cranial nerves, posture, movement, reflexes, tone, and behavior. A pediatric neurologist or developmental specialist administers it. Below-cutoff scores at 9 to 12 months predict CP with high sensitivity. HINE is often the bridge between the GMA and the formal Bayley assessment.

Bayley Scales of Infant Development

The Bayley is the most widely used developmental assessment for children 1 to 42 months. It measures cognitive, language, motor, social-emotional, and adaptive development with standardized scores. A typical Bayley assessment at 18-24 months is one of the most informative single visits in the entire follow-up sequence and is often the basis for further specialist referrals or therapy intensification.

Track 4: Early Intervention

Early Intervention (EI) is a state-funded program for children birth to 3 with developmental concerns. After your NICU initiates a referral (usually before discharge), EI typically contacts you within a few weeks to schedule an evaluation. The evaluation determines eligibility (most HIE babies qualify) and creates an Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP) listing the services your child will receive.

Common EI services include:

  • Physical therapy (PT) for gross motor development.
  • Occupational therapy (OT) for fine motor and sensory skills.
  • Speech-language therapy.
  • Developmental specialists (sometimes called developmental therapists or special instructors).
  • Family training and support.
  • Service coordination.

Services are typically delivered in the home or in community settings. They are usually free or low-cost. The IFSP is reviewed and updated periodically.

3–5 moOptimal GMA Window
9–12 moHINE Window
18–24 moBayley Standard Visit
Birth–3Early Intervention Eligibility

What to Bring to Every Visit

The same preparation works for every appointment. A binder or digital folder containing:

1
NICU discharge summary. The single most important document. Multiple specialists will request it.
2
MRI and EEG reports. Bring the actual reports, not just memory of what was said.
3
Current medication list. Names, doses, frequencies, when they were started or changed.
4
Feeding and growth log. Volume per feed, frequency, weight from prior visits.
5
Therapy notes. If your EI providers send written summaries, bring recent ones.
6
Your questions, written down. 3-5 questions per visit. Ask them at the start, not the end.
7
Notes from prior specialist visits. Even brief summaries help when one specialist needs to know what another said.

How to Advocate Effectively

The follow-up system works well when families participate actively. Specific things that help:

  • Track your own observations. A short note in your phone after each visit (key takeaways, next steps, concerns) makes the next visit more efficient.
  • Ask about coordination. If your pediatrician, neurologist, and EI providers do not communicate, ask whether they can. Some clinics have a care coordinator role.
  • Know what assessment is due when. If your 3-month visit did not include a GMA, ask why and whether one will be done at the next visit.
  • Push politely if a referral has not happened. If EI was referred but you have not been contacted in 4 weeks, follow up.
  • Track wait times. NICU follow-up clinics and pediatric neurology can book months out. Schedule each next visit before leaving the current one.
  • Use telehealth where appropriate. Some assessments can be done by video, particularly the GMA.
If a recommended appointment was never scheduled, call now. Sometimes referrals do not go through; sometimes appointments get cancelled and the rescheduling does not happen. The first 24 months matter for early diagnosis and intervention. Closing scheduling gaps as they appear is one of the most important things parents can do.

What Comes After the First Two Years

By age 2, most HIE babies have a clearer picture: either typical development is on track, or specific neurodevelopmental issues have emerged and been characterized. Either way, follow-up usually continues:

  • School-age cognitive assessments at 4-5 years (WPPSI or similar) to characterize learning profile before kindergarten.
  • Continued pediatric neurology if epilepsy is present or risk remains.
  • Continued therapy through school-based services (Section 504 plan or IEP).
  • Periodic developmental and educational reassessment through the school years.
  • Transition planning in adolescence for adult care if disabilities persist.

The early years require the most active engagement. Follow-up does become less intensive as the picture clarifies, but the foundation built in the first 24 months matters for years to come.

When specialists give different opinions

Across the multiple tracks of follow-up, you may sometimes encounter conflicting information. The pediatrician says development looks fine; the EI provider notices subtle motor differences; the neurologist suggests waiting; the developmental pediatrician recommends more therapy. This can be confusing. A few practical strategies: (1) Trust the most specialized observer for their specific domain. The pediatric neurologist’s opinion on tone and reflexes outranks the pediatrician’s. The developmental psychologist’s Bayley score outranks general impressions. (2) Ask for the rationale. “What specifically are you seeing that supports your conclusion?” Specific observations are more reliable than overall impressions. (3) Bring conflicts back for resolution. If your pediatrician and neurologist disagree, mention it explicitly at the next visit. They may need to discuss directly. (4) When in doubt, lean toward more therapy rather than less. Therapy is rarely harmful; missed therapy windows are.

What to do if a follow-up clinic says “everything looks fine”

Sometimes follow-up clinics give reassuring assessments that conflict with parent observations. If you have specific concerns the clinic has not addressed, several options. First, ask explicitly which standardized assessments were performed and what the scores were; “everything looks fine” should be backed by specific numbers if possible. Second, request a follow-up visit sooner than the next scheduled one if your concerns persist. Third, consider a second opinion at another regional NICU follow-up program or pediatric neurology center, particularly for children with more complex needs. Fourth, document your observations in a notebook with dates and specifics. Parent observations of subtle differences are often the first to notice things; a clinic visit lasting 60 minutes captures only a snapshot.

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