dear Rosa,
Not being from the UK I must say that I had no idea what a physio tech instructor is. Have looked around a bit and it seems to be a name for people with a variety of expertise and background knowledge working with physio´s.
I have to presume that your PTinstructor will have knowledge (education) of paediatric problems otherwise he/she would not be helping you.
Here are some of my thoughts on the subject after having read your short description.
- In my opinion, babies and young children should only be treated by people that have been specially trained, such as paediatric physiotherapists.
- we therapists are not medical doctors and we can only assess and diagnose our own physiotherapeutic diagnosis, not a medical one.
- children develop with an enormous variability in acquiring milestones. The order of the milestones is not as important as the observation of variability in movement. Does your therapists know about the work of Mijna Hadders Algra and Karen Adolphs Karen E. Adolph > Home?
I can also recomment the following website About skillsforaction.com | skillsforaction.com.
Children learn from experimenting and repeating new moves (a lot). By putting them into different environments and asking them to do things by themselves you are basically giving them time and opportunity to practice and acquire new skills.
on a mum/child/and personal level...
- if you worry about your child, he will feel this and react
- if you feel something is wrong, I would suggest you pursue the matter. I have found that parents are very often right.
You mention having a learning disorder, so do many others. It does not have to affect your feelings. Trust you feelings in this matter.
As a parent you have the right to ask us professionals to help you.
Stupid questions do not exist...
Keep asking untill you are satisfied you have been heard.
About the sensory problems mentioned...
a therapist trained in Sensory Intergration (Ayres) might be able to help.
In our country therapists with a SI training are nearly always (paediatric) occupational therapists and sometimes paeditric physio's.
I presume it will be the same in the UK. They are able to assess sensory problems and give suggestions on how to handle your child if there is a sensory issue.
kind regards
Esther