Primitive Reflex Educational Webinar

Dr. Brittany Schuler PT, DPT, CBIS, NCS, CPRCS

Primitive Reflexes

How Retained Reflexes Affect Your Brain

Emotional and Behavioral Regulation

Children or adults have difficulty regulating their emotions and behaviors. Poor impulse control. Mood swings.

Sensory Issues

Children or adults that have sensory processing issues. Hypersensitive to smells, touch, taste, light, and sound. Difficulty with tags or clothes around the waist.

Anxiety

Children or adults can face difficulty managing anxiety and some things may cause anxiety that typically should not. Low stress tolerance and shows signs of freezing when in stressful situations.

Other Symptoms

Decreased balance, coordination, difficulty with transitions, difficulty with math/reading/writing, bed wetting past 5 y.o.

Picky eating. Attention and focus issues. Fidgety. Trouble crossing midline. Visual perception. Auditory processing. W-sitting or toe walking. Tone issues. Difficulty with social interactions. And so much more.

ABOUT US

Meet Dr.Brittany Schuler

PT, DPT, CBIS, NCS, CPRCS

Brittany has been a practicing clinician for over 10 years. She is a board Certified Neurological Specialist, Certified Brain Injury Specialist and most recently a Certified Primitive Reflex Clinical Specialist.

Her main focus as been on neurological conditions and most recently the effects of retained primitive reflexes and how they affect our every day life, especially in children.

This webinar will be educational in nature, to provide a background on how retained reflexes are tied to ADHD tendencies, behavioral issues, sensory processing disorders, coordination issues, picky eating, emotional regulation, bed wetting, speech issues, and more. Retained reflexes are affecting children and their success academically and socially with their peers. This can carry over into adulthood and lead to lifelong struggles.

Testimonials

"My 5 year-old daughter has been 6 nights pull up free!"

-Jessica

"My daughter is not fighting us in the morning to get dressed for school anymore!"

-Kristen

"His coordination is getting better and he is finally asking to go to the bathroom on his own!"

-lynnette

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