Many autistic children show motor coordination differences: clumsiness, low core tone, or sensory-seeking. At Thera360 in Kakinada, physiotherapy works on motor coordination and sensory-motor regulation, pacing each session to the child rather than the other way around, and building stability before any strength work begins.
A predictable routine, a visual schedule, and dim lighting if it helps the child settle. The session is paced to the child, not the other way around.
Swings, scooter board, and weighted play, used to help the child regulate first. Strength work begins only after that.
We share notes monthly with the occupational and speech therapists involved, so everyone is working off the same plan.
Physiotherapy here addresses motor coordination and sensory-motor regulation: it uses vestibular and proprioceptive play to help the child regulate, then works on core tone and stability before strength. It supports motor development; it does not treat the condition itself.
Physiotherapy covers only the motor coordination and sensory-motor regulation side. Speech, behaviour, and learning sit with your speech therapist, behaviour therapist, and special educator. Dr. Hymavathi coordinates with whichever of these your child already sees and shares notes monthly, so the plans line up; she does not provide those services in-house.
How our care network worksNo. Physiotherapy supports motor coordination and sensory-motor regulation. It does not treat autism itself, and we will not tell you otherwise.
Yes. We use a predictable routine, a visual schedule, and dim lighting if it helps. The session is paced to the child, not the other way around.
Yes. We share notes monthly with the occupational and speech therapists involved, so everyone is working off the same plan.
A 30-minute assessment with Dr. Hyma. WhatsApp is the fastest line, she replies herself.
Mon 9am–8:30pm · Tue–Sat 9am–8pm · Sun closed