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If you've ever wondered whether what you're seeing in your kid is "normal," you are part of a much larger pattern. Here is what the data actually says.
If you are a parent paying attention to your child's development in 2026, you have probably had some version of this thought: Is this normal? Should I be worried? Is something wrong with my kid?
You are not alone, and you are not wrong to wonder. The thing nobody is telling parents directly is that the children growing up now are developing differently than the children who came before them. Not because anything is wrong with them. Because the world they are growing up in has changed faster than the systems built to support them.
That is the central finding of our 2026 State of Pediatric Development, a report we publish each year drawing on Coral Care clinical intake records, parent screener responses from families across all 50 states, and a year of external research from the CDC, the Department of Education, and major child development institutions.
Here is what we want every parent reading this to know.
What you are noticing is real
The concerns parents flag for school-age children today look different than the concerns they flagged a decade ago.
For children under three, the top concerns parents bring to us are still where they have always been: speech that strangers cannot understand, frustration around feeding, slow potty training, difficulty using words to ask for what they need. These are the developmental milestones the pediatric system has been built to catch.
For children five to twelve, the picture has shifted. The leading concern is no longer speech. Two out of three parents flag trouble managing emotions. Half flag overwhelm with homework or multi-step tasks. Nearly half flag constant fidgeting or inability to sit still. For teens, the dominant concerns are time management, emotional regulation, and friendships.
These are real developmental concerns. They are not personality. They are not parenting failure. They are not a child being "difficult." They are the skill clusters that occupational therapists and developmental specialists treat, surfacing at the ages and in the patterns we now see across thousands of families.
Why parents are catching more (and earlier)
Earlier identification of developmental concerns is the most significant improvement in pediatric care in the last decade, and a lot of the credit goes to parents.
This generation of parents is more developmentally literate than any prior generation. They discuss mental health with their children at rates their own parents never did. They complete developmental screeners voluntarily, on their phones, after their kids have gone to bed. They Google their children's milestones and read about regulation and sensory processing and executive function. They notice early. They follow their gut. They show up to pediatric appointments with specific questions.
Our own data reflects this. The median age of children entering Coral Care for evaluation dropped by more than two months in a single year. The share of our intakes under age three has grown. Outside our data, the median age of first-time autism diagnosis nationally dropped from seven to five for boys between 2015 and 2024. The system is catching kids it used to miss, in part because parents are speaking up earlier and louder.
The system was built for a different child
What has not kept pace is the system meant to support those children.
School-based services are stretched thin. Forty-four states report special education teacher shortages. Three out of four of the school-age children we see at Coral Care are not on an IEP, often because they do not meet their state's eligibility threshold, or because the waitlist is months long, or because the IEP exists on paper but the services do not materialize in their classroom. The families that reach us are usually families who concluded that what their school could offer was not enough.
Insurance is theoretically supportive and practically a maze. Most commercial plans cover occupational, physical, and speech therapy "when medically necessary," but the definition of medical necessity varies plan by plan. Prior authorization takes weeks. Many plans require a diagnosis the child does not yet have. Many cap sessions per year well below clinical recommendation.
The pediatric referral system tends to address one concern at a time. A child who needs OT for sensory regulation and SLP for expressive language and PT for low tone often has to navigate three separate referrals, three separate authorizations, and three clinicians who do not communicate with each other. More than a quarter of the children Coral Care evaluates need two or more services. The system was not designed for that reality.
What this means for you
If you have been worried about your child for a while, that worry deserves to be taken seriously. The single most consistent finding in pediatric developmental research is that earlier intervention produces better outcomes. Waiting is rarely the right answer.
If your pediatrician says "wait and see" and your worry does not fade, get a second opinion. If your child is struggling with regulation, attention, or daily living skills and the school says they are not eligible for support, you have options outside the school system. If the path you have been navigating feels harder than it should be, that is because the path was built for a different family, a different child, and a different generation of demand.
None of this is your fault. None of this is your child's fault. The numbers in our report describe thousands of families having a version of the same experience, in every state, across every demographic, across every type of insurance. You are part of a much larger pattern, and the pattern is structural.
What you can do is trust what you see. You are the most reliable observer of your child's development. The system has not always made it easy to act on what you observe. We are trying to make it easier.
Coral Care provides in-home pediatric occupational, physical, and speech therapy, in-network with major commercial insurance, with no diagnosis required to start. To learn more about whether Coral Care is right for your family, start here. To read the full 2026 State of Pediatric Development report, click here.


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