Pediatric cerebral palsy is a syndrome of non-progressive brain damage caused by various causes before birth to 1 month after birth. It is mainly characterized by central motor deficits and postural abnormalities, and is often accompanied by a variety of impairments in intelligence, vision, hearing, eating, swallowing, speech and behavior, which can seriously affect a child’s life. Some parents of children with cerebral palsy either enter into a treatment misunderstanding or lose confidence in the treatment after their children have undergone long-term treatment, which is undesirable. Parents and their children must learn to face the disease squarely in order to achieve the most effective recovery results: 1. face the problem, face the reality, and insist on scientific treatment; 2. parents should have patience, love, and confidence in recovery; 3. parents should not overprotect, pity, give up, intimidate, or spoil their children, and let them go to school to receive education as much as possible, and try not to Compared with other children, encourage participation in games and activities, and let the child go out as much as possible. In fact, clinical studies have long confirmed that the earlier a child with cerebral palsy is found, the better the outcome of treatment, which is relatively poor if the child is older than 6 years old. The following are some easy-to-learn and reliable methods to help parents observe and determine if their child has signs of pediatric cerebral palsy: 1. Sleeping for too long or not sleeping. 2. No sound when crying or a low, straight cry. 3. Poor swallowing. 4. Uncoordinated movement of arms and legs, with more lateral movement. 5.Can’t hold the legs when peeing. 6.Can’t lift head at 3 months, can’t turn over at 6 months, can’t sit at 8 months. 7.No eye contact with parents, and often convulsions. If you find that your child has the above phenomena, you should pay attention to it and go to a regular hospital or a specialist for examination as soon as possible, and after the diagnosis is confirmed, you should treat it in time, and you must adhere to the principle of combining surgery and rehabilitation. For cerebral palsy patients, in addition to receiving surgery at the appropriate age (2.5 to 6 years old), post-operative orthopedic surgery (i.e., corrective treatment for deformities such as scissor gait and inversion of the foot) and rehabilitation training should also be performed to ensure the most satisfactory results. For children with simple cerebral palsy, physical therapy can be used, such as massage, passive movement, automatic mediated movement, automatic movement, resistance movement, conditioned movement, mixed movement, combined movement, rest, relaxation, flaccid limb movement, balance movement, interactive movement, reaching movement, etc., to help them move their limbs and stimulate the nerve endings and damaged brain cells. In addition, I would like to tell the parents of children with cerebral palsy that rehabilitation is a long-term process and relying on rehabilitation teachers and doctors alone is far from enough. The help of parents plays a very important role in the rehabilitation of children with cerebral palsy, especially children with poor cognitive function must be instructed to cooperate with the training staff to educate and train their children in their spare time so as to get twice the result with half the effort.