More Q&A With Professor Iona Novak

Fri 07 May 2021

Question: Does primitive reflex testing in infants have any role in cerebral palsy management?

Iona's Answer: Primitive reflex testing was one of the historical clinical examinations conducted to identify cerebral palsy. However, reflex testing is not the most accurate predictor of cerebral palsy. The most accurate tools to identify cerebral palsy include: brain MRI plus General Movements Assessment Plus the Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination. When these 3 tools are all indicating cerebral palsy, there is a 98% chance the child in front of you does have cerebral palsy. The Hammersmith Infant Neurological Examination includes reflex testing items, however the total Hammersmith score is more predictive than reflex testing alone. And the combination of all 3 tests is even more predictive.

Some clinicians also historically believed that treating primitive reflexes, by facilitating the child into reflex inhibiting positions would improve movement. Nowadays, we understand that reflex inhibiting positions do not improve movement, given that reflexes are involuntary. And a movement needs to be self-generated (not therapist generated) in order to be learnt, retained and generalised via neuroplasticity.

Thu 21 May 2026

A smiling young child sits in a supportive wheelchair indoors near large windows with natural light streaming in. The child wears a pink outfit and appears joyful and engaged. Overlaid text reads: “Introducing the Disability Tech Index — A free, searchable database of assistive technology, built by and for the community it serves” alongside the Cerebral Palsy Alliance Research Foundation logo.

Introducing the Disability Tech Index — a free, searchable database of assistive technology, built by and for the community it serves. 

Tue 19 May 2026

A smiling man with a prosthetic leg sits cross-legged on a yoga mat outdoors, meditating in a sleeveless navy athletic outfit. Palm trees and a chain-link fence are visible in the sunny background. Overlaid text reads: “Mental Health Awareness Month — You Are Not Invisible: Mental Health, Disability, and the Care We All Deserve” alongside the Cerebral Palsy Alliance Research Foundation logo.

May is Mental Health Awareness Month — a time to slow down, speak honestly, and remind ourselves that everyone deserves support, to be seen, and to feel whole.