Craniosacral Therapy for Infants and Children


Craniosacral Therapy

Craniosacral Therapy is a gentle, non-invasive, yet effective type of hands-on body treatment that is helpful for infants and children as well as adults. It is an assessment tool plus corrective and preventive treatment. A newborn Craniosacral Therapy session can minimize or eliminate the repercussions of difficult births and help ensure good health for well babies. All babies should receive newborn Craniosacral evaluations and treatments as soon as possible after birth. Children should continue to receive Craniosacral Therapy periodically throughout childhood as they adapt to the process of growing up.


A Typical Session

Children rest fully clothed on a massage table or in the therapist’s or parent's lap. The therapist monitors the craniosacral rhythm with her hands. She conducts other gentle assessments and corrects the sources of pain and dysfunction using gentle manipulative techniques. Sometimes children release emotions or cry during treatments, but the techniques do not hurt babies and children. Seldom does the pressure exceed five grams (the weight of a nickel). The work is gentle.


Craniosacral Therapy treatment sets the stage for the body to most efficiently use its own power to heal. Most children find the sessions to be deeply relaxing. Babies and children will often sleep for a longer stretch than usual after a session. During a session, the therapist adapts her technique to the attention span and needs of the child.


Getting Born

During the birth process, the baby's head molds to fit through the mother's pelvis. It is normal for the cranial bones to override each other. After birth, these overrides and other accommodations in the baby's skull should not persist. If they do not correct themselves, they can interfere with proper cranial nerve function leading to colic, breathing, swallowing, digestive or sensory-motor impairments and more. Sometimes babies are injured in the birth process. The injuries may be both physical and emotional. Craniosacral Therapy can address these injuries as well as the effects of prolonged labor, vacuum extraction, forceps or cesarean birth.


Surgical Birth

Cesarean birth can be harder on babies than we imagine. Cesarean-born babies have lower Apgar
scores, more respiratory distress, more abnormal neurological exams, and more abnormal Craniosacral evaluations. They have more chronic middle ear infections and other problems throughout childhood. The birth process is more abrupt and potentially more frightening than vaginal birth. Surgically born infants have fewer quiet alert periods right after birth and have less opportunity to share bonding time with their mothers who may be unconscious  or recovering in another room. Craniosacral Therapy can effectively address all of  these things.














 

This is Cesarean Birth

This is the cesarean-born baby pictured above after his first Craniosacral Therapy treatment

Reasons to Treat a Child

Children's bodies are malleable. They can correct easily and quickly because they have spent less time organizing themselves around their physical and emotional restrictions. Left untreated, these restrictions can take more time and effort to correct in adulthood, causing pain and dysfunction in the interim.

More Reasons:

Chronic Middle Ear Infections

Infant Colic

Headaches

Learning Disabilities

Sensory Integration Problems

Breastfeeding Difficulties

Autism

Developmental Delays

Chronic Pain

Difficult Mobility

ADD/ADHD

Cerebral Palsy

Genetic Disorders

Neurological Conditions

Reflux

And More

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