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Physiotherapy

What is Physiotherapy?

Physiotherapy (physical therapy) aims to help individuals with autism improve their motor skills, coordination, posture, balance, and overall physical functioning. Through targeted exercises and movement-based activities, physiotherapists support bodily control and motor development.

 

Does my child need Physiotherapy?

Children who show:

  • Delayed or poor gross motor skills (walking, running, jumping, coordination)

  • Balance or posture issues

  • Difficulty with physical activities, weakness or poor stamina

  • Challenges in motor coordination, body-awareness or sensory-motor integration — may benefit from physiotherapy.

 

How does Physiotherapy help a child with autism?

Physiotherapy can:

  • Improve gross motor skills such as walking, running, jumping, climbing, coordination

  • Enhance posture, balance, muscle strength, flexibility and body awareness

  • Support sensory-motor integration, which may reduce motor planning difficulties or sensory-based behaviors

  • Enable better participation in physical play, sports, daily tasks requiring motor skills

  • Improve confidence and ease in movement — thereby supporting independence

 

What does Physiotherapy include?

  • Gross motor activities (jumping, balancing, walking, climbing, running)

  • Exercises for strength, flexibility, posture, balance and coordination

  • Sensory-motor integration exercises to support body-awareness and regulation

  • Adapted movement-based play or functional movement tasks

  • Collaboration with other therapists (OT, speech) if needed to integrate motor skills with daily functioning

 

When should Physiotherapy start?

As soon as delays or motor difficulties become apparent — early intervention helps prevent further developmental delays and promotes better physical coordination and functioning.

 

Who can provide Physiotherapy for a child with autism?

Qualified physiotherapists usually based in hospitals, therapy centres, special schools, or pediatric rehab clinics. Ideally those experienced with children on the autism spectrum and motor/sensory challenges.