Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com
Summary:
(2007 Independent Publisher Award Bronze Medalist, Health/Medicine/Nutrition category)
All children with cerebral palsy and other conditions that result in gross motor delays need help and reinforcement to learn basic motor skills, usually with assistance from a physical therapist. Because the degree of developmental delay varies greatly from child to child, a thorough motor evaluation is an important step before establishing a specific therapy plan.
This new guide, written by an experienced physical therapist, provides parents with a complete understanding of how the physical characteristics of cerebral palsy and similar conditions--muscle tightness and weakness, increased or decreased flexibility, abnormal reflexes, impaired sensory perception--affect a child's ability to sit, crawl, stand, and walk.
With that foundation established, the book offers dozens of practical, easy-to-follow exercises that address specific areas of motor delay and development, including: Head control; Muscle tone; Proper positioning; Involuntary movements; Stretching and flexibility; Balance and coordination; Strength training.
The exercises are illustrated with photos, and many present one or two variations, which take into account a child s preferences and skill level. Additionally, every chapter includes profiles of children in therapy, and a set of frequently asked questions on the chapter topic.
With Teaching Motor Skills, parents will be more knowledgeable about their child's unique set of strengths and weaknesses, and better able to contribute to his motor development. As the book emphasizes, learning new skills depends upon many factors, including the reinforcement of at-home therapy and good cooperation and communication between a child s physical therapist and parents.
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Rating:
a must have for any parent of a child with CP
Customer Rating:
This book has been a great help to us already. Our 6 month old son has recently been diagnosed with spastic quadriplegia. The book offers great explanations of how CP affects their bodies and what can be done to help them achieve developmental milestones. The adaptations that can help tremendously but are very simple (such as putting a rolled up towel under their shoulders so that arm movements become easier). I don't know what I would do without it.
Great book!
Customer Rating:
This book is a great review of cerebral palsy and provides a lot of useful information for both the parent and therapist. Thank you for taking the time to create such a useful guide!
I am a pediatric physical therapist and plan to read this gem from cover to cover.
Wonderful Resource
Customer Rating:
We have been using this book as a resource while working with my 1 1/2 year old grandson who was shaken at the age of 7 weeks. While not everything in it applies because he does not have Cerebral Palsy, it has provided a wealth of very practical hands-on information in laymen's terms that we had trouble finding elsewhere.
Really Good Home Guide
Customer Rating:
My son has an undiagnosed developmental delay - similar to cerebral palsy. He is 20 months old and I am so glad that I found this book while he was young (although I wish I had been stretching him since infanthood). We have excellent therapists, but this book is a great reminder of how important home therapy is - and it serves as a reminder to me of the exercises the therapists do. Easy to read and the pictures are a good guide.
A must have for parents of children with CP
Customer Rating:
This book is filled with helpful, easy to understand info for parents of kids with CP. My daughter is 3 and I wish I had it when she was an infant. I haven't finished reading it, but have learned alot. Her physical therapist even uses one of the walking suggestions (using a hula hoop) and says it's a great idea.