How is it that premature babies can't crawl for eight months?

According to normal children, the law of growth and development should be: three turns, six sitting, seven rolling and eight crawling, but it does not mean that every child follows such strict laws. Some children may be one step behind their peers in the process of growing up, but if there is no abnormal development, there is generally no need to worry too much.

However, for premature infants, because their body organs are not mature enough at birth, it is easy to have some developmental risks, such as dyskinesia. They will not sit when they should sit and will not walk when they should walk, which requires the attention of their families.

It is also common that an eight-month-old baby can't crawl. It is not necessarily caused by illness, but may also be related to some external factors, such as the weather, which hinders the baby's sports ability, and some parents are unreasonable.

Teaching your baby to climb this action may also lead to the baby not being able to climb for eight months. Some obese babies are bulky and slightly backward in sports.

Crawling is not easy for children. Some children don't like activities, so they should train hard. When training crawling, let the child squat, lie prone, raise his head and support himself with his hands. Parents gently bend the baby's legs under his stomach and put some moving and interesting toys in front of the baby, such as tumblers and singing dolls, to promote the baby's active crawling.

However, if you say that your baby is premature and has been corrected for eight months, and can't crawl, or even have no awareness of this, if you find that your baby has other dyskinesia, you need to make a functional measurement for your baby. If it is underdeveloped, it needs to intervene as soon as possible. Generally, premature infants can catch up with normal full-term infants after reasonable rehabilitation training before the age of 2.