The child, Xiao Jiang, 7 years old, was born with induced pneumonia, which caused ischemia and hypoxia in the child’s brain and brain damage resulting in cerebral palsy. Diagnosis: The child was 7 weeks old, could not run, could not stand, his legs were taut, he had some intellectual problems, and often had tics, so it was concluded that the child had severe pediatric cerebral palsy. From the brain MRI film, it is obvious that the child has damage to the cerebellar area, so the child’s motor functions such as walking and standing are impaired, because the cerebellum is the master of balance. Suggestion: The child is now 7 weeks old and these symptoms indicate that the child now has severe cerebral palsy, so treatment must be provided as soon as possible. There is no technology to change the child’s intelligence, so the child can only be strengthened through training. As for motor disorders, the child is now past the prime stage of growth, the instinctive learning stage, so surgery is not very meaningful, and now can only be treated through rehabilitation in some rehabilitation hospitals. Early prevention and early treatment of children with cerebral palsy should be done well, so how should parents pay attention to these? First of all, there are some early symptoms to determine whether the child may have cerebral palsy; 1. Sudden stiffness of the child: difficulty in dressing the child in certain positions, such as in the supine position, flexing his body or hugging him. 2. Floppy: The infant’s head and neck are floppy and cannot be lifted. His limbs droop when he is held in a suspended position. The infant rarely moves. 3. Delayed development: The infant learns to lift his head, sit and use his hands later than children of the same age, and may use one part of his body more than another, e.g., some children often use one hand instead of both. 4. Poor feeding: Poor sucking and swallowing. The tongue often pushes out milk and food. Difficulty in shutting up. Abnormal behavior: May cry, be irritable, sleep poorly, or be very quiet, sleep too much, or not laugh at 3 months. If the child shows these symptoms, then beware that the child may have cerebral palsy and parents should rush to the hospital for diagnosis. What parents should do to prevent pediatric cerebral palsy: 1. When you are pregnant: prevent rubella virus infection. 2.After pregnancy: conduct regular health checkups: pay attention to exclude factors of difficult delivery, and if there is high blood pressure and diabetes should be treated actively. Ensure nutrition and prevent preterm delivery. Avoid unnecessary medication. Choose a good delivery hospital according to the expected date of delivery and be prepared for a safe delivery. 3, after the birth of the baby:Focus on protecting immature babies, asphyxia, severe jaundice babies, and the necessary treatment; such as oxygen, into the incubator, etc. Brain-injured infants should have a follow-up card and be screened regularly. 4.Educate parents to recognize early symptoms of meningitis:such as fever, stiff neck, drowsiness, etc. Once found, treat promptly. 5.Brain lesions should be noted in those with lagging motor development, abnormal posture, poor nursing, shrieking without sleep, and excessively soft or hard muscles.