If your child has cerebral palsy, you have probably heard a lot about physical therapy. But occupational therapy is equally important, and many parents are less clear about what it involves, what it works on, and why it matters. This guide explains everything you need to know about OT for your child with CP, from what happens in sessions to what you can do at home, in practical terms that help you make the most of every appointment.

OT vs PT: What Is the Difference?

The simplest way to understand the difference is this: physical therapy focuses on how your child moves their body through space (sitting, standing, walking, transfers). Occupational therapy focuses on how your child uses their body to interact with the world (grasping objects, feeding, dressing, playing, writing).

In practice, there is significant overlap. Both therapists work on trunk control, posture, and functional positioning. But the goals are different. A PT might work on sitting balance so your child can sit independently on the floor. An OT might work on sitting balance so your child can sit at a table and use both hands to eat with a spoon. Same skill, different functional application.

AreaPhysical Therapy (PT)Occupational Therapy (OT)
Primary focusGross motor skills, mobility, gaitFine motor skills, daily living, sensory processing
Muscle groupsLegs, trunk, large body movementsHands, fingers, mouth, fine coordination
Typical goalsWalk with walker, sit independently, standSelf-feed, grasp crayon, dress independently
EquipmentAFOs, walkers, standers, gait trainersAdapted utensils, splints, AAC devices, seating
Feeding rolePositioning during feedingOral motor skills, utensil use, food textures

Both disciplines are essential for children with CP, and the most effective therapy programs coordinate PT and OT so that the goals complement each other. If your child only receives one, ask about adding the other. Under IDEA Part C, children under 3 with CP qualify for both at no cost.

What OT Works On for CP Kids

Occupational therapy for children with cerebral palsy addresses a broad range of skills that are critical for participation in daily life. According to a 2013 systematic review by Novak and colleagues published in Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, OT interventions with the strongest evidence base for children with CP include task-specific training, constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT), bimanual training, and context-focused approaches.

Fine motor skills and hand function. This is the core of OT for CP. The therapist works on hand opening and closing, grasp patterns (palmar grasp, pincer grasp, lateral pinch), release (letting go of objects voluntarily, which is harder than it sounds for children with spasticity), and in-hand manipulation (moving objects within the hand). For children with hemiplegia, a major focus is bilateral coordination: learning to use both hands together, with the affected hand as a stabilizer while the dominant hand manipulates.

Feeding and oral motor skills. Many children with CP have difficulty with feeding because the muscles of the mouth, jaw, and throat are controlled by the same brain regions affected in CP. An OT or feeding specialist works on sucking, chewing, swallowing coordination, self-feeding with utensils, drinking from cups, and managing different food textures. Feeding is one of the most immediately impactful areas of OT because it affects nutrition, growth, and mealtime quality of life for the whole family.

Self-care skills. As your child grows, OT addresses dressing (putting on shirts, pants, socks, shoes), bathing (washing hands, tolerating water, using soap), oral hygiene (toothbrushing), and toileting readiness. The therapist breaks down each task into steps and identifies which parts your child can do independently, which need adaptation, and which require assistance.

OT is not just about doing things the typical way. A great OT finds the way that works for your child. If your child cannot button a shirt, the answer might be practicing buttoning, or it might be switching to magnetic closures. If your child cannot hold a standard spoon, the answer is a built-up handle or angled spoon that fits their hand. The goal is independence and participation, not perfection of form.
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Fine Motor Skills and Hand Function

Hand function is one of the most significant factors in determining a child’s level of independence. The ability to pick up food, hold a crayon, press a button, or operate a communication device depends on fine motor skills that are often significantly affected by cerebral palsy.

The Manual Ability Classification System (MACS) is a five-level scale that describes hand function in children with CP, similar to how the GMFCS describes gross motor function. Level I means the child handles objects easily and successfully. Level V means the child does not handle objects and has severely limited ability to perform even simple actions. Understanding your child’s MACS level helps the OT set appropriate goals and choose the right interventions.

For children with spastic hemiplegia (one side affected), OT often includes constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT) and bimanual training. CIMT involves temporarily restraining the stronger hand to encourage use of the affected hand. According to a Cochrane systematic review, CIMT produces meaningful improvements in hand function that are maintained over time. Bimanual training teaches both hands to work together on functional tasks like opening a jar (one hand stabilizes, the other turns the lid).

For children with spastic quadriplegia or dyskinetic CP, hand function goals may focus on developing a reliable pointing method for communication, learning to activate switches for cause-and-effect toys and later for powered mobility or AAC devices, and developing enough hand control for self-feeding with adapted utensils.

Sensory Processing in CP Children

Many children with cerebral palsy have sensory processing differences that affect how they experience and respond to the world around them. Research published in Research in Developmental Disabilities found that sensory processing disorders are present in approximately 40 to 90 percent of children with CP, depending on the CP type and severity.

Hypersensitivity (over-responsiveness). Some children are extremely sensitive to certain textures, sounds, lights, or touch. They may gag on food textures that other children handle easily, become distressed by clothing tags or certain fabrics, avoid messy play (paint, sand, water), or become overwhelmed in noisy or visually busy environments. This can significantly affect feeding, dressing, play, and participation in group activities.

Hyposensitivity (under-responsiveness). Other children seek intense sensory input and may seem unaware of pain, temperature, or their body’s position in space. They may mouth objects excessively, prefer very strong flavors, or seem to need constant movement stimulation. This can create safety concerns and affect motor planning.

An OT evaluates your child’s sensory profile and develops a sensory diet, a personalized plan of sensory activities distributed throughout the day that helps your child’s nervous system stay regulated. This might include deep pressure activities before mealtime, gradual texture exposure for feeding, weighted blankets for calming, or movement breaks during activities that require sustained attention.

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Adaptive Tools and Equipment

One of the most immediately impactful things an OT does is recommend adaptive tools and equipment that make daily tasks possible or easier. The right tool at the right time can transform a frustrating, dependent experience into one where your child participates actively.

Feeding tools. Built-up handle utensils with thicker grips for easier grasping, angled spoons that reduce the wrist rotation needed to scoop food, plate guards that prevent food from being pushed off the plate, suction bowls and plates that stay in place on the table, and adapted cups with handles, weighted bases, or cut-out rims that allow drinking without full neck extension.

Hand and wrist splints. Resting hand splints that maintain the hand in a functional position overnight, thumb abduction splints that keep the thumb out of the palm to improve grasp, and wrist extension splints that support the wrist in a position that allows better finger function. Splints are custom-made by the OT and adjusted as your child grows.

Dressing aids. Button hooks for children who lack the fine motor precision for small buttons, zipper pulls with large loop handles, elastic shoe laces that convert lace-up shoes to slip-ons, and adaptive clothing with magnetic closures, side openings, or Velcro fasteners.

Communication and learning tools. Switch-activated devices that your child can operate with a single press, adapted keyboards and touchscreen accessories, pencil grips and weighted pens for handwriting, and slant boards that angle paper for better visual and motor access during tabletop activities.

OT at Home: Activities and Strategies

As with physical therapy, what you do at home between OT sessions multiplies the impact of formal therapy. Your OT should coach you on activities that build fine motor skills, sensory tolerance, and self-care abilities through daily routines and play.

For fine motor development: Play-dough and clay for hand strengthening. Stacking blocks and nesting cups for grasp-release. Threading large beads onto a string for bilateral coordination. Peeling stickers off a sheet for pincer grasp practice. Tearing paper into strips for hand strength and coordination. Finger painting for sensory exposure and hand movement.

For feeding skills: Practice self-feeding with adapted utensils at every meal, even if it is messy and slow. Offer finger foods that require a pincer grasp (small soft pieces of banana, cheese, cooked pasta). Let your child drink from an open cup with hand-over-hand support. Make mealtimes relaxed and pressure-free, so feeding practice feels like participation rather than therapy.

For sensory exposure: Water play, sand play, and bean bins for tactile exploration. Brushing with different textures during bath time. Gradual introduction of new food textures alongside familiar ones. Deep pressure activities like being rolled in a blanket, firm massage, or carrying heavy objects (appropriate to your child’s ability).

Follow your OT’s guidance on hand splinting schedules. Splints are only effective when worn as prescribed. Too little wear and the benefits are lost. Too much wear and the hand muscles do not get the active practice they need. Your OT will set a wearing schedule that balances positioning with functional hand use. Keep the splint clean, check for pressure marks, and bring concerns to your OT promptly.
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How to Get OT Services

Occupational therapy for children with CP is available through several pathways. For children from birth to age 3, OT is provided at no cost through your state’s early intervention program under IDEA Part C. You do not need a confirmed CP diagnosis to access these services; a suspected diagnosis or documented developmental concern is sufficient.

For children over age 3, OT may be provided through your school district under IDEA Part B (if OT is needed for educational participation), through outpatient therapy clinics covered by health insurance, or through private therapy paid out of pocket. Many families use a combination of school-based and outpatient OT to ensure sufficient frequency and intensity.

When seeking an OT for your child with CP, look for a therapist with specific pediatric experience and, ideally, experience with cerebral palsy. Ask about their approach to hand function training, their experience with CIMT and bimanual training, and whether they are comfortable prescribing and fabricating splints. The right OT becomes one of the most valuable members of your child’s care team.

If your child’s cerebral palsy was caused by a birth injury such as HIE resulting from delayed medical response or missed warning signs during delivery, your family may have legal options that can provide the financial resources to fund intensive OT, specialized adaptive equipment, home modifications, and a lifetime of care. A free, confidential case review can help you understand what happened during your baby’s birth and what resources may be available to your family.

Every bit of independence matters. The child who learns to feed themselves with an adapted spoon has achieved something profound. The child who uses a switch to turn on music has found a way to control their environment. The child who pulls on their own shirt, even if it takes five minutes, has taken ownership of a task that defines daily life. OT is where these victories live. They are small on paper and enormous in practice.
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