dc.description.abstract | Change in theoretical framework over the last decades and recent research in pediatric
physiotherapy, has created a debate surrounding therapeutic touch. What is the role of or
is there a need for handling and hands-on facilitated guidance (facilitation)? Does it limit
and/or interfere with children’s learning and development? It is frequently argued that
therapeutic touch represents a passive and/or static approach that restricts disabled
children’s participation during interaction and activity in clinical encounters leading to
decreased home, school and community participation. Touch may even appear as
coercive and controlling. In this context, therapeutic touch is largely associated with
physical hands-on activities. However, therapeutic touch can also be understood as an
intersubjective phenomenon that arises from a deep connection between movement,
perception, and action. We believe the significance of therapeutic touch and its impact
on physiotherapy for children has not been considered from this broader, holistic
perspective. In this theoretical paper, we will apply enactive concepts of embodiment,
sensory-motor agency, coordination, and emergence to explore the concept and
importance of touch in physiotherapists‘ clinical face-to face encounters with children.
We will frame the discussion within the context of the typical sensorimotor development
of children from the fetal stage to birth on and into adulthood. Moreover, we will rely
on biological, physiological, and phenomenological insights to provide an extended
understanding of the importance of touch and the significance of touch in clinical practice. | en_US |