A Gap That Has Real Consequences
Children and adolescents with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) — a broad group that includes conditions such as Down syndrome, autism spectrum disorder, and intellectual disability — are significantly less physically active than their peers. This gap has consequences that go beyond childhood.
Poor motor skills in early life make it harder to participate in sports, playground activities, and even basic daily tasks. And children with IDD are more likely to struggle with obesity, which raises their risk of diabetes, heart disease, and other chronic conditions as they age. Yet until now, no comprehensive review had looked at both motor skills and body weight together — leaving caregivers without a full picture of what exercise can and cannot do.
What We Used to Assume
For years, physical education programs for children with IDD were often improvised or treated as secondary to academic and therapeutic goals. The assumption was that standard gym class, if adapted slightly, was probably good enough. Evidence for specific program types was thin, and results were mixed.
But here's the twist: this new analysis pooled data from 33 studies and over 5,000 children. The results are clear enough to point in a specific direction. Not all exercise is equally effective, and the type of activity matters as much as the fact of doing it at all.
Why Structured Movement Works
Think of motor skill development like learning to play an instrument. Casual exposure helps a little, but structured practice — with repetition, feedback, and gradually increasing difficulty — is what builds real competence. For children with IDD, this analogy holds especially well.
When children practice specific movement patterns repeatedly in a supported environment, the brain builds stronger connections between the motor cortex (the part of the brain that controls movement) and the muscles. Children with IDD often have differences in how these neural connections form, which means they may need more structured, deliberate practice than typically developing peers to achieve similar gains. Purposeful exercise programs provide exactly that.
What This Analysis Examined
Researchers searched four major medical databases for randomized and controlled trials published up to October 2025 that measured the effects of physical activity on motor skills or body composition in children and adolescents aged 4 to 18 years with IDD. They found 33 studies meeting their criteria, covering 5,245 participants. Researchers grouped results by activity type — including motor skills training, sport-specific programs, virtual reality games, and moderate-intensity continuous training (MICT) — to identify what works best for which goal.
Physical activity significantly improved fundamental motor skills overall — a large, meaningful effect size across all study types combined. Children showed gains in two specific areas: locomotor skills (running, jumping, hopping) and object control skills (catching, throwing, kicking). The improvements were consistent and statistically robust.
For body composition, moderate-intensity continuous training (MICT) — think steady-paced activities like brisk walking, cycling, or swimming for sustained periods — was the approach that produced significant reductions in BMI and body fat percentage. Programs focused purely on motor skills or sport did not show the same body composition benefits, suggesting that different goals require different exercise prescriptions.
This doesn't mean every child needs the same program — matching the activity type to the goal is what drives results.
The Virtual Reality Surprise
One finding stood out as unexpected. Virtual reality games — which have been enthusiastically promoted as a way to motivate children with disabilities to move — showed meaningful improvement in motor skills in the pooled data. But when the researchers assessed the quality of the evidence behind those studies, it was rated lower than for the other activity types. The existing VR research may be too small, too short, or too inconsistent to draw confident conclusions. The potential is real, but the evidence base is not yet strong enough to recommend VR as a primary intervention.
What Experts Are Saying About This
This analysis fills a genuine gap in the research. Caregivers and special education professionals have long been told that exercise is important for children with IDD, but guidance on what kind of exercise to pursue has been vague. The finding that structured motor skills training and moderate-intensity continuous exercise each serve distinct purposes gives educators and therapists something specific to work with. It also underscores that children with IDD should not be sidelined from physical activity programming — they benefit from it substantially.
If you are a parent or caregiver of a child with IDD, this research supports advocating for structured, purposeful physical activity in your child's school or therapy program. Two types of programs appear most supported by evidence: motor skills training for improving coordination and movement quality, and moderate-intensity aerobic exercise for managing body weight and fat. Talk to your child's pediatrician, physical therapist, or special education team about what programs are currently available — or could be added. The benefits appear large enough to be worth the effort.
Important Limitations
Despite covering over 5,000 children, the individual studies varied widely in how they defined IDD, measured outcomes, and structured their exercise programs. Some study populations focused on specific diagnoses like autism or Down syndrome, which may not represent all children with IDD equally. The long-term effects — whether motor skill gains last into adulthood — were not examined. Most included studies were also relatively short in duration.
The next priority for researchers is longer-term follow-up studies that track whether early motor skill gains in children with IDD carry forward into adolescence and adulthood. Studies specifically designed around virtual reality — with better controls and larger samples — would help clarify whether that technology has a real role. Researchers also want to understand the optimal dose: how many sessions per week, at what intensity, and for how long. As evidence builds, the goal is individualized exercise prescriptions that are as specific and evidence-based for children with IDD as they are for any other population.