Common questions from parents
Does physiotherapy treat autism?
Is this physical therapy or occupational therapy?
What helps at home without a therapist?
How do I know whether my child needs a professional evaluation?

You watch your child stumble on a curb other kids hop over, grip a pencil like it might get away, and then come apart over a sound you barely noticed. Somewhere along the way, someone told you these were separate problems with separate fixes, and that the realistic move was to lower your expectations. Here is what the research actually shows: motor coordination differences appear in more than half of autistic children, and they travel right alongside the sensory and emotional load your child carries all day. Your child is not broken, and these are not three unrelated flaws stacked on top of one another. They are one nervous system working to organize a body and a world at the same time.
TL;DR
Does physiotherapy treat autism?
Is this physical therapy or occupational therapy?
What helps at home without a therapist?
How do I know whether my child needs a professional evaluation?
The original graphic lays out three ways body-based therapy supports an autistic child, and each one is worth decoding. First, targeted movement builds gross motor skills like running and balance and fine motor skills like holding a pencil, and those motor pathways share brain real estate with thinking and learning. Second, vestibular and proprioceptive work, the systems that tell your child where their body is in space, helps the brain sort sensory information, which often takes the edge off restlessness and impulsivity. Third, it treats the whole child rather than one isolated skill, linking physical ability to emotional steadiness, focus, and everyday participation.
At a glance, here is what the science behind it supports:
Your child’s clumsiness, restlessness, and big reactions are not three separate problems. They are one nervous system asking for the kind of input that helps it organize.
”When your child has been holding still and holding it together, their body is carrying tension you do not always see. Physical activity gives the brain a different job to do and a flood of organizing input, which is why a movement break before homework often works better than one more reminder to focus. This is not autism-specific magic; it is how movement feeds the learning brain in every child. Twenty minutes of activity shifts the brain chemistry tied to attention and memory, and for a child whose system runs hot, those breaks are not a distraction from the work, they are what makes the work possible.
The infographic points to three habits that help at home, and each has a sensory logic behind it:
Body and brain develop together: the brain regions that coordinate movement also support attention, planning, and emotional control, so building coordination rarely stops at the body.
Regulation has a physical root: proprioceptive and vestibular input gives the nervous system organizing feedback that helps an autistic child feel grounded and respond more calmly.
Small daily habits add up: heavy work, movement breaks, and active play support sensory and emotional regulation more than one long session ever could.
Here is the quiet system failure: schools and clinics tend to file your child’s challenges into separate drawers. Motor skills go to one specialist, behavior to another, focus to a third, and emotional regulation gets treated as something your child should simply choose to do better. The developing brain does not work in drawers. The same body awareness that steadies a child physically also underwrites their ability to regulate emotion, hold attention, and stay in the room when things get hard. It leans on the brain’s manager that runs focus and self-control, and on the brain chemistry behind motivation and attention. Build the foundation, and the skills that looked unrelated start moving together.
“Motor difficulties are not a side issue in autism. Research reviews find motor coordination differences in the majority of autistic children, present from infancy and shaping how a child participates in learning and play.” Adapted from systematic reviews of motor coordination in autism spectrum disorder, 2025.
Movement is not a break from the real work of regulation and focus. For a developing brain, movement is how that work gets built.
”You are not asking for a different child. You are asking for the tools to help the one in front of you feel steadier in their own body. The villain here is not your child’s wiring; it is the habit of treating coordination, focus, and calm as separate problems for separate experts, while the parent who sees all of it gets handed a waiting list. Nobody will ever advocate for your child as hard as you will, and that is exactly why your involvement is not optional.
If you want to build the focus-and-regulation foundation underneath all of this, our Brain Bloom program trains the brain-body skills, attention, self-control, and body awareness, that help any child feel more organized and ready to learn.
Because attention, motor skills, and emotional regulation are wired together, progress in one often lifts the others. Our All Access membership gives you every course and tool in one place, so you support the whole child as the pieces start moving together.