Prematurity-Related Developmental Risk
How Prematurity-Related Developmental Risk Is Assessed
Prematurity-Related Developmental Risk is followed through structured developmental surveillance using corrected age, with regular clinician-led milestone reviews across communication, motor, cognitive, social and self-care domains, plus vision and hearing screening. It is monitored over time, not diagnosed from one test. A clinical AbilityScore and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinicians.
If your baby arrived early, the question that lingers is simple: how will we know if their development needs a little extra support?
In short
Prematurity-Related Developmental Risk isn't diagnosed from a single test — it's followed over time through structured developmental surveillance that uses your child's corrected age (age counted from the original due date, not birth date). A paediatrician or developmental clinician tracks milestones across communication, movement, thinking, social and self-care domains at regular intervals through the early years. Where a watch-point emerges, a fuller clinician-led assessment maps exactly where support will help — early, gently and effectively.How it is actually assessed
For a child born preterm, the focus is monitoring rather than a one-off label:- Corrected age is used — a baby born 10 weeks early is compared to peers using the due-date timeline until roughly 2 years, so milestones aren't unfairly judged.
- Regular developmental follow-up — many preterm babies are placed on a high-risk follow-up schedule, with reviews at key ages across infancy and toddlerhood.
- Standardised, clinician-administered checks of motor tone, communication, problem-solving, social engagement and feeding/self-care.
- Vision and hearing screening, because these can quietly shape later development.
- Parent observations matter — what you notice at home about play, response to your voice, and movement is genuine clinical data.
The aim is not to attach a frightening verdict, but to notice early where a small head start helps — many preterm children catch up beautifully with timely support.
When to seek a review
Bring forward a developmental review (using corrected age) if you notice persistent stiffness or floppiness, very little response to your face or voice, not reaching for or holding objects as expected, no babble, or any loss of skills already gained. Trust your instinct — early questions are always welcome.The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from an app or an online form. For a child born early, that means a calm, structured starting point and a plan that grows with them. Learn more about prematurity-related developmental risk, how a clinician establishes the AbilityScore®, and how early occupational therapy supports motor and self-care milestones.Trusted sources
WHO healthy-development guidance and the Nurturing Care Framework; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on developmental surveillance and screening for children born preterm. Paraphrased for parents.Next step — If your child arrived early, book a developmental assessment at a Pinnacle centre for a clear, reassuring baseline.
This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Using corrected age, watch for persistent stiffness or floppiness, little response to your face or voice, not reaching for or holding objects, absent babble, or any loss of skills already gained.
Try this at home
Always count milestones from your baby's original due date, not birth date, until around age two — it gives a fairer picture of how they're really doing.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
What is corrected age and why does it matter?
Corrected age counts your child's development from their original due date rather than their birth date. A baby born 10 weeks early is compared to peers on the due-date timeline until around age two, so their milestones aren't judged unfairly.
Is prematurity risk diagnosed with one test?
No. It is followed over time through regular developmental surveillance and clinician-led milestone reviews, not a single test. The aim is to notice early where a little extra support helps.
Will my preterm baby catch up?
Many children born early catch up beautifully, especially with timely follow-up and support where needed. Regular reviews using corrected age help ensure any extra help arrives early.