It is a common belief that babies and children should have no structural stresses or strains in their bodies, because they are so young.

The reality is very different. 

Birth is one of the most stressful events of our lives. The baby is subjected to enormous forces, as the uterus pushes to expel the baby against the natural resistance of the birth canal. The baby has to turn and twist as it squeezes through the bony pelvis, on its short but highly stimulating and potentially stressful journey. 

The baby’s head has the remarkable ability to absorb these stresses in a normal delivery. In order to reduce the size of the head, the soft bones overlap, bend and wrap as the baby descends. The baby’s chin is normally well tucked down towards its chest to reduce the presenting diameter of the head. 

Many babies are born with odd shaped heads as a result. In the first few days, the head can usually be seen to gradually lose the extreme moulded shape, as the baby suckles, cries and yawns. However, this unmoulding process is often incomplete, especially if the birth has been difficult. As a result, the baby may have to live with some very uncomfortable stresses within its head and body.

Some babies cope extremely well with even quite severe retained moulding and compression, and are contented and happy. For others it is a different story, and they can display a variety of problems, which cranial therapy aims to solve.

  • Crying babies
  • Feeding difficulties
  • Sickness, colic and wind
  • Sleep disturbances
  • Recurrent ear infections
  • Ear infections
  • Asthma
  • Sinus and adenoidal problems
  • Fatigue
  • Behaviour problems
  • Learning difficulties
  • Cerebral palsy and other types of brain damage and more
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