Sensory Integration Disorder, known as Sensory Integration Disorder, is the failure of external sensory stimulus signals to be integrated in a child’s nervous system, resulting in the appearance of an uncoordinated organism. Sensory Integration Disorder (SID) is a disorder that often occurs in childhood, in which the child’s brain nervous system is unable to effectively integrate external sensory signals for some reason, resulting in motor, structural, and spatial disorders that can affect physical and mental health. There are various types of sensory disorders. For example, children with visual disorders are unable to read properly, miss words and make typos, and often turn the sides upside down when writing. Auditory disorders occur when a child is deaf to what is being said to him or her. Vestibular system disorders are seen in children who are hyperactive, can’t tell right from left, and fall easily. Ontogenetic disorders are also characterized by poor motor coordination and poor manual skills. Children with sensory disorders need to go to a regular hospital in time for treatment.