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The most encouraging finding in our 2026 data is also the easiest to miss: families are catching developmental concerns sooner, and earlier is almost always better.
Most of the conversation about children's development right now is worried. Worried about screens, worried about reading scores, worried about attention and regulation and the state of childhood in general. A lot of that worry is earned, and our 2026 State of Pediatric Development report does not look away from it.
But the single clearest trend in our own data is good news, and it deserves to be said plainly. Children are being identified earlier than they used to be. Parents are noticing sooner, asking sooner, and acting sooner. That is the most important improvement in pediatric care in the last decade, and a great deal of the credit belongs to parents themselves.
What the numbers show
Across the children evaluated through Coral Care, the median age at first evaluation dropped by more than two months in a single year. That may not sound dramatic, but at a population level a shift like that is significant. It means a meaningful share of children are reaching support during the developmental windows when intervention does the most good, rather than after.
The share of our evaluations for children under age three has grown. And this tracks with what is happening nationally. Outside our data, the median age of a first autism diagnosis for boys dropped from seven years old to five between 2015 and 2024. Federal surveillance data shows children born more recently are being identified by 48 months at notably higher rates than children born just four years earlier.
The system that finds children who need support is working better at the earliest ages than it ever has.
Why earlier is better
The reason early identification matters so much is not complicated, and it is one of the most consistent findings in all of developmental science. The earlier a child receives support for a developmental concern, the better that child tends to do.
Young brains are remarkably adaptable. The connections that govern speech, movement, sensory processing, and regulation are forming fastest in the first years of life. Support delivered during those windows works with that natural plasticity rather than against the grain of habits already set. A speech difference addressed at two is a different project than the same difference addressed at six. Neither is hopeless. The earlier one is simply easier, faster, and more complete.
This is why the slow drift toward earlier identification is the most hopeful thing in our report. Every month earlier that a child is seen is a month of development happening with support instead of without it.
Parents are the reason
It would be easy to credit this shift to better screening tools or more pediatric awareness, and both have helped. But the engine underneath it is parents.
This generation of parents is the most developmentally informed in history. They talk about regulation and sensory processing and milestones in ways their own parents never did. They complete developmental screeners on their phones after the kids are asleep. They notice the thing that seems a little off and they follow that instinct instead of waiting for someone to tell them it is allowed. They show up to appointments with specific questions and they do not leave satisfied with "let's wait and see" when their gut says otherwise.
That instinct is reliable. In our experience, a parent who has been quietly worried about their child for months is usually noticing something real. The improvement in early identification is, at bottom, a story about parents being taken more seriously and trusting themselves more.
The honest caveat
Earlier identification is real, and it is good. It is also uneven.
The children being caught earliest are not evenly distributed across the country. Earlier identification still skews toward families with more income, more flexibility, more proximity to providers, and more familiarity with how the system works. Families in rural areas, families navigating the system in a second language, and families without the time or means to chase down an evaluation are still more likely to be identified later, if at all.
So the progress is genuine, and the gap is also genuine. Both things are true. The work ahead is making early identification something every family gets, not a benefit that tracks with privilege.
What this means for your family
If you have been wondering whether the thing you have noticed in your child is worth acting on, the most evidence-based answer is almost always yes, and sooner rather than later. Early support is not an overreaction. Waiting is the bigger risk.
The encouraging part of our report is that more families are reaching that conclusion on their own, and reaching it earlier. That is a generation of parents quietly changing the trajectory of children's development, one early phone call at a time.
Coral Care provides pediatric occupational, physical, and speech therapy delivered in person, in your child's own environment, in network with major commercial insurance, with no diagnosis required to start. The full 2026 State of Pediatric Development report is available at joincoralcare.com.


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