The possible causes of cerebral palsy that are known to us are complex and varying. In fact, any factors that cause damage to fetal and neonatal brain tissue, such as ischemia, hypoxia, injury or poisoning, can cause irreversible brain damage and lead to cerebral palsy. We summarize the main causes of cerebral palsy as follows: premature birth, obstructed labor, asphyxia, jaundice, high fever, and fetal dysplasia. Cerebral palsy in children mainly causes central motor disorders with abnormal muscle tone and posture, as well as various degrees of mental retardation, growth retardation, oral and facial dysfunction, chewing and swallowing difficulties, difficulty in closing the mouth, salivation, dental dysplasia, and speech disorders. After a child with cerebral palsy is diagnosed, in addition to going to a regular medical institution for rehabilitation treatment in the first place, the choice of treatment is also an extremely critical point. The treatment of cerebral palsy is not simply a matter of medication, training or surgery, but a syndrome of postural and motor dysfunction due to non-progressive brain injury. Some parents take a chance on the language, intellectual and physical dysfunctions of their premature infants, thinking that it is just a developmental delay and that the child may get better when he/she grows up a little more. Clinical research has confirmed that as long as children with cerebral palsy are detected early, intervened early and treated regularly, they can be rehabilitated to the greatest extent possible, and those in good condition can even go to school and live like normal children. If children with abnormal symptoms and brain damage after birth are not given enough attention, the best time for treatment is delayed, and the recovery of the child will not be ideal. Generally speaking, infants with cerebral palsy have motor deficits in head lifting, rolling over, sitting and standing, which parents often call “soft”. The most common postural abnormalities are head tilting back, eye strabismus, inward rotation of the upper limbs and backward rotation of the hands, and inward tiptoeing of the lower limbs. Most of the children are born with mental retardation because their mothers have a history of obstructed labor, hypoxia or asphyxia before or after birth, jaundice, high fever, and fetal dysplasia. In our long-term clinical practice, we have confirmed that the traditional treatment of medication is only effective for early cerebral palsy children, and the older the child is, the less it works until it is ineffective; neural stem cell transplantation is still immature and should not be tried easily; hyperbaric oxygen is a treatment technique that is used more often in primary hospitals, but this technique is only effective for children with acute neurological injury within one month of onset; or children with spastic cerebral palsy are just rehabilitated and the necessary training is neglected. However, this technique is only effective for children with acute neurological injury within 1 month of onset; or children with spastic cerebral palsy are only rehabilitated and the necessary surgical procedures to reduce muscle tone are ignored. We take spastic cerebral palsy, which has the highest clinical incidence, as an example, the child must follow comprehensive rehabilitation training, including cerebral palsy surgery, and motor training, otherwise the treatment effect will be directly affected. It is unfortunate that many parents of children with cerebral palsy neglect surgery and fail to have their children undergo cerebral palsy stage I (FSPR surgery) and stage II surgery (CP-MMA surgery) early. There is also the involuntary movement type of cerebral palsy (including tachycardia, torsion spasticity, ataxia), motor rehabilitation training with the use of assistive devices to enhance motor control and life as well as the ability to participate, will often have a better rehabilitation effect. Although it is impossible to achieve a complete cure or rehabilitation for pediatric cerebral palsy due to the special nature of the disease, if the child can receive regular, systematic and comprehensive rehabilitation treatment, it is possible to achieve maximum rehabilitation, so that children who cannot walk can walk with assistive devices or participate in social activities, so that children who need assistive devices can walk independently, and so that children with postural disorders can recover close to normal people. Finally, during the rehabilitation process of children with cerebral palsy, attention should also be paid to the cognitive development of the child. For children with less intellectual damage and mild cognitive impairment, attention should also be paid to not “emphasizing martial arts over literature”.