A new systematic review looked at 28 studies involving 668 children and adolescents (18 and under) with intellectual disability. The review examined whether telerehabilitation (therapy delivered remotely, often with parent involvement) could help with cognitive, behavioral, and functional skills.
The findings suggest that telerehabilitation is linked to improvements in language and communication, challenging behaviors, executive functions, and motor outcomes. Parent-mediated and telehealth-delivered behavioral interventions also appeared to reduce parental stress. Digital cognitive training programs showed short-term gains in working memory and attention, but long-term effects were less consistent.
However, the evidence is limited. The studies varied widely in design, intervention types, and how they measured results. Many had methodological weaknesses. Because of this, the findings should be interpreted cautiously. No safety concerns were reported, but the review did not track side effects.
For families and clinicians, this review suggests telerehabilitation is a feasible option that may offer benefits, especially when caregivers are actively involved. But more rigorous research is needed to confirm these results and understand long-term effects.