Although there is no complete cure for pediatric cerebral palsy, the right treatment can still achieve good results and eventually realize the dream of independent living for children with cerebral palsy. Parents of children with cerebral palsy have been seeking medical help for their children and have tried many different treatments, but how can the efficacy be differentiated? The efficacy criteria for pediatric cerebral palsy patients include the recovery of the child’s muscles, development, etc., and are divided into cured, effective, efficient and ineffective. Cure: the child’s indexes are normalized and the child can resume a normal life; Effective: the child’s indexes are significantly improved, the muscle recovery is better, the development is significantly improved, and the development of language, motor and intellectual ability is not very different from normal children; Effective: the child’s condition is improved, but the child still cannot live independently, the muscle recovery is not very good, and the development is delayed; Ineffective: the child’s condition is not significantly changed or deteriorated. No significant change or deterioration. Pediatric cerebral palsy is clinically dangerous and is likely to lead to various complications in the child’s prognosis, which can have a great impact on the child’s life, such as difficulties in walking, speech or many problems that the child may face in life. This condition will continue to worsen as the child gets older, so treatment needs to be carried out early, with medication as the mainstay and long-term training and supplementary care as the fundamentals to increase the success rate of the child’s treatment. Conventional care methods do not enable the child to have a fundamental improvement, and must be carried out using a comprehensive approach of external interventions, including massage of the body’s muscular tissues, life skills development, and exercise of the child’s organ tissue recovery ability to ultimately achieve the desired outcome.