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Telerehabilitation improves cognitive, behavioral, and functional outcomes for children and adolescents with intellectual disabilityTelerehabilitation helps children with intellectual disability

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Key Takeaway
Consider telerehabilitation as a feasible option to improve functional outcomes and reduce parental stress in youth with ID.

This systematic review synthesized 28 studies involving 668 children and adolescents with intellectual disability to evaluate the impact of telerehabilitation, including parent-mediated programs, cognitive training, and tele-coaching. The review found that telerehabilitation is associated with improvements in language and communication skills, executive functions, and motor outcomes.

Specific interventions, such as parent-mediated and telehealth-delivered behavioral interventions, were associated with reductions in challenging behaviors and parental stress. While digital cognitive training programs demonstrated feasibility and short-term gains in working memory and attention, the evidence for long-term effects was less consistent across the reviewed studies.

The authors note significant limitations, including highly heterogeneous evidence, substantial differences in study designs and intervention protocols, and frequent methodological limitations. Because of these factors, the certainty of some outcomes is limited. Telerehabilitation appears to be a feasible approach for supporting this population, particularly when caregivers are actively involved, though results for lifestyle and mental health interventions remain preliminary.

How this fits prior evidence

This finding addresses a gap in managing functional outcomes for children with intellectual disability by highlighting telerehabilitation as a feasible delivery model. While previous evidence explored the role of Life Story Work to address identity construction in this population, the current review provides evidence for remote and parent-mediated interventions to improve communication, behavior, and executive function.

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.

What this means for you:
Telerehabilitation shows promise for children with intellectual disability, but more research is needed.

Common questions

What is telerehabilitation?

Telerehabilitation is therapy delivered remotely, often through video calls or digital programs. For children with intellectual disability, it can include parent-mediated programs, cognitive training, and behavioral interventions.

Does telerehabilitation work for children with intellectual disability?

The review found links to improvements in language, behavior, and thinking skills. But the evidence is limited and varied, so results should be seen as promising but not proven.

Are there any side effects?

The review did not report any side effects or safety concerns. However, it also did not track adverse events, so more information is needed.

Who can benefit from telerehabilitation?

Children and adolescents (18 and under) with intellectual disability may benefit, especially when parents are actively involved in the therapy.

Study Details

Study typeMeta analysis
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedJun 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
IntroductionIn recent years, telerehabilitation has been increasingly used to improve access to care for children and adolescents with intellectual disability (ID). However, the available evidence is still limited and highly heterogeneous. This systematic review aimed to evaluate the impact of telerehabilitation interventions on cognitive, behavioural, and functional outcomes in this population.Materials and methodsThis systematic review was conducted in accordance with Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines and registered in International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) (CRD420251005874). A comprehensive search of PubMed and Web of Science databases was performed from inception to March 12, 2026. Eligible studies included randomized controlled trials and observational studies investigating telerehabilitation interventions in children and adolescents (≤18 years) with ID.ResultsA total of 28 studies involving 668 participants were included. Interventions encompassed a wide range of approaches, including parent-mediated programmes, cognitive training, behavioural interventions, and tele-coaching models. Across studies, telerehabilitation was generally associated with improvements in language and communication skills, challenging behaviours, executive functions, and motor outcomes. Parent-mediated and telehealth-delivered behavioural interventions showed evidence, especially in reducing externalizing behaviours and parental stress. Digital cognitive training programmes showed feasibility and short-term gains in working memory and attention, although long-term effects were less consistent. Interventions targeting lifestyle and mental health showed promising but preliminary results. However, studies differed substantially in design, intervention protocols, and outcome measures, along with frequent methodological limitations.DiscussionTelerehabilitation appears to be a feasible and potentially effective approach for supporting children and adolescents with ID, particularly when caregivers are actively involved. Larger and methodologically robust studies are needed to better define intervention characteristics and assess long-term outcomes, as well as on the development of hybrid care models integrating in-person and remote approaches.Systematic Review Registrationhttps://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/, identifier CRD420251005874.
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