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managing-pediatric-rehabilitation

Adapts rehabilitation assessment and intervention for pediatric developmental needs with family-centered approaches. Use when providing pediatric rehab, addressing developmental delays, or managing childhood rehabilitation.

personAuthor: jakexiaohubgithub

Managing Pediatric Rehabilitation

Adapts rehabilitation assessment and intervention for pediatric populations using developmental frameworks, family-centered care models, and age-appropriate standardized measures including the GMFM, PEDI-CAT, WeeFIM, Bayley-III, and GMFCS classification. Addresses cerebral palsy, developmental delay, congenital conditions, pediatric TBI, and musculoskeletal disorders.

Why This Skill Exists

Pediatric rehabilitation differs fundamentally from adult practice: children are not small adults. Developmental stage, skeletal immaturity, growth potential, and the family as the unit of care all demand specialized assessment and intervention approaches. Documentation must reference age-appropriate norms, developmental milestones, and family goals rather than adult functional benchmarks. School-based services under IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) have different documentation requirements than medical model therapy. Payers require evidence that therapy addresses a medical condition causing developmental delay or functional limitation, not simply developmental variation within normal range. This skill ensures developmentally appropriate, family-centered, and defensible pediatric rehabilitation documentation.


Checkpoint A — Intake Verification

Before beginning pediatric rehabilitation, confirm:

Required clinical questions:

  • What is the child's age (chronological and corrected gestational age if premature)?
  • What is the diagnosis (cerebral palsy, Down syndrome, developmental delay, pediatric TBI, congenital anomaly)?
  • What developmental milestones has the child achieved and which are delayed?
  • What is the family's primary concern and functional goal for the child?
  • What educational setting does the child attend (early intervention, preschool, school-age) and are school-based services in place?
  • Are there medical complexities (seizures, feeding difficulties, respiratory support, orthopedic hardware)?

Required documents:

  • Physician referral with diagnosis and ICD-10 codes
  • Birth history (gestational age, birth weight, NICU stay, complications)
  • Developmental pediatrician or neurologist evaluation if available
  • Current IFSP (Individualized Family Service Plan, ages 0-3) or IEP (Individualized Education Program, ages 3-21)
  • Prior therapy evaluation reports
  • Imaging (brain MRI for CP/TBI), genetic testing results if applicable

Step 1 — Classify Developmental Status and Functional Level

For cerebral palsy (most common pediatric rehab diagnosis):

Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) — 5 levels:

  • Level I: Walks without limitations; limitations in more advanced gross motor skills
  • Level II: Walks with limitations; difficulty with running, jumping, uneven surfaces
  • Level III: Walks using handheld mobility device indoors; wheeled mobility outdoors/community
  • Level IV: Self-mobility with limitations; transported or uses power mobility in community
  • Level V: Transported in manual wheelchair in all settings

Manual Ability Classification System (MACS) — 5 levels (ages 4-18):

  • Level I: Handles objects easily and successfully
  • Level II: Handles most objects but with somewhat reduced quality/speed
  • Level III: Handles objects with difficulty; needs help to prepare or modify activities
  • Level IV: Handles a limited selection of easily managed objects in adapted situations
  • Level V: Does not handle objects; severely limited ability for even simple actions

Communication Function Classification System (CFCS) — 5 levels:

  • Level I: Effective sender and receiver with unfamiliar and familiar partners
  • Level II: Effective but slower pace with unfamiliar partners
  • Level III: Effective with familiar partners
  • Level IV: Inconsistent even with familiar partners
  • Level V: Seldom effective even with familiar partners

Age-adjusted developmental milestones (screen):

  • Gross motor: head control (3-4 mo), sitting (6-8 mo), crawling (8-10 mo), pulling to stand (9-12 mo), walking (12-15 mo)
  • Fine motor: palmar grasp (3-4 mo), transfer (5-7 mo), pincer grasp (9-12 mo), stacking (12-15 mo)
  • For premature infants: use corrected age until 24 months

Step 2 — Select and Administer Age-Appropriate Standardized Assessments

| Age Group | Primary Motor Assessment | Functional Assessment | Supplemental | |---|---|---|---| | 0-18 months | Alberta Infant Motor Scale (AIMS) | Bayley-III motor scales | GMs (General Movements) if <5 months | | 12 months-5 years | GMFM-66 or GMFM-88 | PEDI-CAT (Pediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory - Computer Adaptive Test) | Peabody Developmental Motor Scales (PDMS-2) | | 6-18 years | GMFM-66 (for CP) | WeeFIM (ages 6 months-7 years or functional age) | BOT-2 (Bruininks-Oseretsky Test of Motor Proficiency) | | School age (all diagnoses) | Age-appropriate functional tests | School Function Assessment (SFA) | Handwriting assessments (for OT) |

GMFM (Gross Motor Function Measure):

  • 88 items across 5 dimensions: lying/rolling, sitting, crawling/kneeling, standing, walking/running/jumping
  • Each item scored 0-3 (0=does not initiate, 1=initiates, 2=partially completes, 3=completes)
  • GMFM-66 (Rasch-analyzed 66-item version) provides interval-level scores for tracking change
  • Administer in standardized environment (mat, supportive surface, no shoes unless stated)

PEDI-CAT:

  • Computer adaptive test measuring daily activities, mobility, social/cognitive, responsibility
  • Age range: birth to 20 years
  • T-score normative comparison (mean 50, SD 10)
  • Tracks change over time with scaled scores

Step 3 — Develop Family-Centered Goals and Intervention Plan

Goal-setting with the family:

  • Use the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM) to identify family-prioritized goals
  • Goals must be functional and participation-based: "Child will independently eat with adapted spoon during school lunch" not "improve UE ROM"
  • For IFSP (0-3 years): goals are family outcomes embedded in daily routines
  • For IEP (3-21 years): therapy goals support educational participation

Evidence-based interventions by GMFCS level: | GMFCS Level | Motor Interventions | Equipment/Orthotics | |---|---|---| | I-II | Strength training, task-specific practice, sport/recreation, treadmill training | AFOs if equinus, sport-specific equipment | | III | Gait training with device, strength training, aquatic therapy, partial body-weight-supported treadmill | Posterior walker, AFOs, stander, adaptive bike | | IV-V | Positioning, supported standing, power mobility training, caregiver training | Wheelchair seating system, stander, floor sitter, adaptive bathing equipment |

Intensive therapy models (evidence-based):

  • CIMT (modified pediatric): 3-6 hours/day, 2-3 weeks for UE hemiparesis
  • HABIT (Hand-Arm Bimanual Intensive Therapy): 6 hours/day for 2 weeks for bimanual function
  • Goal-directed training: task-specific, repetitive practice of functional goals (60-90 min sessions)
  • Hippotherapy: when available, for trunk control and postural stability (requires trained therapist and certified equine center)

Step 4 — Coordinate Across Service Settings

Pediatric rehab often spans medical and educational systems:

Early intervention (0-3 years):

  • Services under IDEA Part C; documented in IFSP
  • Natural environment (home, daycare) is preferred service setting
  • Therapy supports family routines, not clinic-based protocol
  • Transition planning to Part B (school) services begins at age 2.5

School-based services (3-21 years):

  • Services under IDEA Part B; documented in IEP
  • Therapy must support educational participation (not medical model goals)
  • Frequency determined by educational need, not medical diagnosis alone
  • PT/OT/SLP are "related services" — available only if needed for FAPE (Free Appropriate Public Education)

Medical outpatient therapy (all ages):

  • Physician-ordered, medically necessary skilled therapy
  • Goals address medical functional limitations beyond educational need
  • Can be concurrent with school services if addressing different goals
  • Insurance authorization required; document distinct medical necessity

Step 5 — Monitor Growth, Development, and Equipment Needs

  • Reassess with standardized measures every 6 months minimum (developmental change is the baseline expectation in children)
  • Track GMFCS level — this may change in early years (typically stable by age 6)
  • Growth monitoring: skeletal growth affects orthotic/wheelchair fit; schedule equipment reviews with growth spurts
  • Orthotic reassessment: every 6-12 months or with growth; document brace type, fit, and functional benefit
  • Wheelchair seating: annual reassessment minimum; document posture, skin integrity, and functional access
  • Musculoskeletal surveillance: monitor for hip subluxation (in CP GMFCS III-V, hip X-rays per screening protocol), scoliosis, and contracture development

Checkpoint B — Pre-Finalization Review

Before finalizing pediatric rehabilitation documentation:

  • [ ] Chronological and corrected age documented
  • [ ] Diagnosis with GMFCS/MACS/CFCS classification if CP
  • [ ] Developmental status compared to age-appropriate milestones
  • [ ] Standardized assessment administered with scores and percentiles
  • [ ] Family goals incorporated using COPM or family interview
  • [ ] Intervention plan is evidence-based and matched to GMFCS level
  • [ ] Equipment needs assessed and recommendations documented
  • [ ] Service coordination across medical and educational settings documented
  • [ ] Caregiver training plan included
  • [ ] Next reassessment date established

Quality Audit

  • [ ] Age-appropriate standardized assessment used (not adult instruments)
  • [ ] GMFM scored correctly with dimension totals and overall percentage
  • [ ] GMFCS level documented with age band (classification varies by age)
  • [ ] Goals are family-centered and participation-based, not impairment-only
  • [ ] Corrected gestational age used for premature infants under 24 months
  • [ ] Educational vs. medical service distinction maintained in documentation
  • [ ] Equipment recommendations include specific product, size, and justification
  • [ ] All [VERIFY] flags resolved or escalated to developmental pediatrician
  • [ ] IDEA/IFSP/IEP coordination documented when applicable
  • [ ] Documentation appropriate for the service setting (medical vs. educational)

Guidelines

  • Never apply adult rehabilitation benchmarks or instruments to pediatric patients — use age-normed tools
  • Family-centered care is the standard: parents/caregivers are partners in goal-setting and intervention
  • CP motor prognosis is linked to GMFCS level: children at Level I-III typically achieve independent ambulation; Level IV-V typically use wheeled mobility as primary mode
  • Early intervention intensity matters: evidence supports intensive, goal-directed, task-specific therapy over passive stretching or NDT alone
  • Constraint-induced movement therapy has strong evidence for hemiplegic CP in children ages 2-8 with minimum hand grasp ability
  • Do not delay power mobility assessment for children who cannot walk independently — independent mobility supports cognitive and social development from age 12-18 months
  • Growth-related changes in CP (lever arm dysfunction, muscle-tendon unit shortening) may cause functional decline in adolescence despite therapy — document and plan proactively
  • Botulinum toxin injections for spasticity in CP require coordinated therapy intensification post-injection
  • Transition planning (pediatric to adult services) should begin at age 14-16 and be documented in the rehabilitation plan
  • All pediatric therapy documentation is HIPAA-protected and FERPA-protected in educational settings — handle accordingly