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One of the quietest findings in our 2026 data: a growing number of parents are flagging everyday skills like dressing, brushing teeth, and using utensils. Here is what is behind it.
When most people picture pediatric occupational therapy, they picture something specialized. They do not picture buttons, zippers, spoons, and toothbrushes. But those everyday tasks, the ones that make up the unglamorous machinery of a child's morning and evening, are showing up more and more often in what parents tell us they are worried about.
In our 2026 parent screener, daily living skills surfaced as a leading concern, alongside the regulation and attention difficulties that get most of the attention. Parents are flagging children who struggle to get dressed without help well past the age you would expect, who cannot manage a fork or spoon smoothly, who resist or fumble through brushing their teeth, who have trouble with handwashing and the small sequenced tasks of self-care.
These are not dramatic concerns. No one writes a news story about a seven-year-old who still needs help with buttons. But they matter, and the reasons they are increasing say something real about how childhood has changed.
These are real skills, not just habits
It is tempting to read a child who cannot dress themselves as simply behind, or coddled, or not trying. That framing misses what is actually going on.
Getting dressed is a genuinely complex task. It requires fine motor control to manage fasteners, bilateral coordination to pull a shirt over the head, motor planning to sequence the steps in order, body awareness to know which limb goes where, and the regulation to stay with a boring task to completion. The same is true of using utensils, brushing teeth, and tying shoes. These are the exact skills that occupational therapists are trained to assess and build.
When a child struggles with them past the typical age, it is usually not laziness or defiance. It is a skill that has not been built yet, often because the conditions that used to build it have quietly changed.
Why these skills are slipping
The honest explanation is structural, and it has very little to do with parenting effort.
A generation ago, more children had long stretches of unsupervised time to practice doing things slowly and imperfectly. There were more hands at home and more unhurried mornings. Today, most families run on two working schedules and a compressed window between the end of the day and bedtime. In that window, the fastest path is almost always for an adult to do the task. It is quicker to button the coat, pack the bag, and brush the teeth yourself than to wait through a child's slow, frustrating, developmentally essential attempt.
This is not a failure of parenting. It is arithmetic. A working family has roughly ninety minutes between dinner and lights out, and every one of those minutes is spoken for. The slow way, the way the skill actually builds, is a luxury of time that fewer families have.
Add to that the role screens now play in occupying children during the in-between moments that used to be filled with fiddling, building, drawing, and figuring things out with their hands. The unstructured practice that used to happen by default now has to be created on purpose.
What helps
The good news is that daily living skills respond well to support, and there is a lot a family can do without any clinical involvement at all.
The single highest-leverage change most families can make is to let one task per day take twice as long. Pick the lowest-stakes moment, the morning when you are not rushing or the weekend breakfast, and let your child do the slow, clumsy version of the thing themselves. Buttoning a coat. Pouring the cereal. Brushing without help. The slowness is not wasted time. The slowness is the skill being built.
It also helps to break tasks into smaller steps and let your child own the last one first. Rather than expecting a child to put on a whole shirt, do all of it except the final pull-through and let them finish. Then hand over a little more each week. Children build confidence from completing things, even small pieces of things.
When a child is significantly behind on these skills, when the gap is widening rather than closing, or when daily routines have become a daily battle that is exhausting the whole family, that is a reasonable moment to talk with your pediatrician or to seek an occupational therapy evaluation. These are precisely the skills an OT works on, and they tend to respond quickly to the right kind of practice.
The bigger picture
The rise in daily living concerns is a small, specific window into the larger story our report tells. The children showing up in pediatric care today are not developing differently because anything is wrong with them. They are developing differently because the everyday conditions that used to build certain skills, slow mornings, free hands, unstructured time, have quietly disappeared from a lot of homes.
Naming that honestly is the first step. The skills are buildable. The window is open. And the slow way, the frustrating way, the way that takes twice as long, is usually the way.
Coral Care provides pediatric occupational, physical, and speech therapy delivered in person, in the spaces where children actually live and learn, in network with major commercial insurance. The full 2026 State of Pediatric Development report is available at joincoralcare.com.


