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Pediatric Services

Learn about the services that support your child's milestones.

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Reinforcing the behaviors you want to see more of, while gently guiding and redirecting your child when less helpful behaviors arise, supporting growth, learning, and positive development every step of the way.

Addressing skills such as producing sounds and words clearly, understanding spoken language, and supporting safe feeding and swallowing—key areas related to communication and oral-motor development.

Helping kids build the big motor skills (sitting, crawling, walking, running, throwing, catching, kicking, balancing, and playing games) that support their strength, coordination, and confidence.

Developing fine motor skills and supporting sensory regulation—things like using zippers and buttons, tying shoes, holding crayons, writing, and building personalized sensory strategies to help kids participate more confidently in daily activities.

The connective piece that brings all of the other therapies together, helping integrate skills across environments and making the overall program easier for families to understand and use.

Our Approach

Evaluate

We start by assessing areas where your child is having difficulty. Your child’s therapy specialist will perform an evaluation and discuss their findings with you.

Plan

Your child’s therapist will develop a treatment plan with you that includes engaging activities to do at home. This plan also integrates episodic care and family education.

Educate

Your role as a caregiver & compliance with your child’s home program are extremely important for success. Education is an essential part of our approach.

Contact Milestone Therapy If Your Child…

Is not walking by 12 months

Is not using different grips with different objects

Uses one catch-all sound or syllable to name most things

Has muscles that seem extra “rigid” or “floppy” when moving

Seems extra “clumsy” or falls a lot

Struggles with handwriting and scissors

Talks using mostly vowels or single words only – no sentences

Is overly sensitive to sounds such as vacuums or hair dryers

Makes limited or no eye contact

Does not roll or sit independently

“Echoes” a known word when answering your question

Doesn’t like touching different textures, pulls at clothes

Does not react to games like peek-a-boo

Is having trouble with stairs

Is omitting whole consonants, saying “a” for “cat”

Does not play with others, rather plays around them

Take The Next Milestone

 Contact us to learn how we can support your child’s growth through personalized therapy services.