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Why a generation of children is developing differently, and what that means for the next decade of pediatric care.
The children showing up in pediatric therapy in 2026 are not the same children the system was built around. They are being identified earlier. They are presenting with a different mix of concerns. And the reasons have less to do with the children themselves than with the world we built around them.
That is the central finding of Coral Care's 2026 State of Pediatric Development. It is the argument we want every pediatrician, every educator, every payer, and every parent to take seriously.
What we are seeing in the data
Coral Care evaluates pediatric occupational therapy, speech-language pathology, and physical therapy needs in the homes where children actually live, eat, and play. For this year's report, our team analyzed a sample of 1,994 clinical intake records from children evaluated between January 2025 and May 2026, alongside thousands of parent screener responses from across the country.
Three patterns stood out clearly.
First, children are being identified earlier. Our median age at clinical intake dropped from 4.58 years to 4.40 years in a single year. That tracks with what Epic Research reported in 2025: the median age of first-time autism diagnosis dropped from 7 to 5 for boys between 2015 and 2024. Early identification is the most significant systemic improvement in pediatric care in the last decade. It is working.
Second, the dominant concern at school age is no longer speech. In our screener data, two out of three parents of children aged 5 to 12 flag trouble managing emotions as their leading concern. Half flag overwhelm with homework. Nearly half flag constant fidgeting. For teens, the leading concerns are time management, emotional regulation, and friendship maintenance. These are executive function and regulation concerns. They were not the dominant pediatric concerns ten years ago.
Third, children today present cross-domain. More than a quarter of the children our clinicians evaluate need two or more therapy services. Six percent need all three: occupational, speech-language, and physical therapy together. Among teens, more than a third need multiple services. The system is built for siloed need. Children present as wholes.
Why the curve is different
None of these patterns are mysterious once you see them next to what has happened to the structure of childhood itself.
A generation ago, most American children grew up in households with a stay-at-home parent, two or three siblings, extended family within a short drive, and long unsupervised hours of neighborhood play. The home was a daily school for daily living skills. The street was the social network. The conflicts that taught regulation got worked out, badly and instructively, between kids.
Today's children are growing up in smaller families, in dual-earner households, with extended family scattered across multiple states, and with most of their unstructured time replaced by either organized activity or a screen. Two-thirds of married-couple families with children have both parents employed, according to the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics data, up from 58 percent in 2011. The average two-year-old has their own tablet by age four. Eighty-eight percent of US public schools now operate one-to-one device programs. Unstructured outdoor play has collapsed to a measured average of seven minutes per day for children aged 6 to 17.
None of this was chosen by parents. All of it shapes what children practice every day, and what they do not. The skills that previous generations developed by default are now skills that have to be explicitly taught, and the families teaching them are working with less time and fewer hands than at any point in recent history.
What this changes about pediatric care
A child whose primary developmental concern is emotional regulation needs to practice regulation in the environment where dysregulation happens. That environment is rarely a clinic. It is the dinner table, the morning routine, the transition from screen time to homework, the resistance at bedtime. A child whose concern is sensory processing needs to practice in the spaces that produce sensory overwhelm. A child whose concerns are fine motor or daily living skills needs to practice with the actual buttons, zippers, and utensils they use every day.
The pediatric system was built for a different child and a different problem. Pediatricians refer to one specialist at a time. School-based services rarely coordinate across disciplines. Insurance authorizes services one at a time. The IEP threshold catches only the most severe cases. Three out of four of the school-age children we evaluate are not on an IEP, even though every family that reaches us has been worried enough about their child's development to seek private therapy out of pocket.
This is not a problem any single part of the system can solve in isolation. It is what happens when childhood itself moves faster than the systems built to support it.
What needs to change
The point of describing the different curve is not to alarm parents. It is to make sure the children growing up now are met by a system that recognizes who they actually are.
For pediatricians, that means continuing to push universal developmental screening earlier, and broadening it to include the regulation and executive function concerns that are now the dominant clinical presentation at school age.
For schools, it means honestly examining the relationship between the saturation of devices in classrooms and the behavioral, attentional, and reading challenges teachers are reporting at unprecedented rates. The recent wave of state-level cellphone policies is a starting point. The deeper question of K-5 device infrastructure will define the next decade.
For payers and policymakers, it means recognizing that the children showing up to private pediatric therapy because their schools and insurers failed them are not a fringe population. They are middle-income families with commercial insurance and engaged parents. They are paying for what should have been covered.
For pediatric care providers, including ourselves, it means moving past the OT-SLP-PT silos that no longer match the children walking in the door. Children present as wholes. Care has to follow.
The children are here. They are growing. The window is open.
Read our full Coral Care 2026 State of Pediatric Development report here. To talk with our team about pediatric occupational, speech-language, or physical therapy in your home, contact us.



