Motor Planning Difficulties
ICF Functioning Domains Affected by Motor Planning Difficulties in Early Childhood
Motor planning difficulties in early childhood affect several ICF functioning domains: Body Functions (b147 psychomotor, b176 sequencing complex movements), Activities & Participation (mobility, fine hand use, self-care, play, daily routines), with Environmental Factors as facilitators or barriers. The ICF frames this as a functioning profile, not a diagnostic label.
Motor planning difficulties rarely sit in one box — they ripple across how a child moves, communicates and joins in everyday life.
In short
In early childhood, motor planning difficulties (praxis difficulties) map across multiple ICF functioning domains — principally Body Functions (b147 psychomotor functions, b176 mental functions of sequencing complex movements), Activities & Participation (d4 mobility, d5 self-care, d2 carrying out tasks and routines, d8 play and pre-academic learning), with Environmental Factors (e3 support, e1 adapted products) acting as facilitators or barriers. The ICF frames this as a functioning profile, not a disorder label — the same pattern can present very differently from one child to the next.The ICF mapping in practice
The WHO ICF organises functioning into interacting components. For a young child with difficulty planning, sequencing and executing novel motor actions, the clinically relevant codes cluster as follows:- Body Functions — b147 psychomotor functions (regulation and integration of motor output), b176 mental function of sequencing complex movements (ideation, sequencing, timing), and contributing b760 control of voluntary movement functions.
- Activities & Participation — d440 fine hand use, d445 hand and arm use, d450–d455 walking and moving, d5 self-care (dressing, feeding, fastenings), d2 carrying out daily routines, and d880 engagement in play — where dyspraxic patterns most visibly affect participation.
- Environmental Factors — e1 products and technology and e3 support and relationships, which can either ease or amplify functional impact.
Because the ICF is a biopsychosocial model, the functional impact is always read in context: the same child may participate well in a structured, adapted setting and struggle in an unstructured one. This is why ICF-based profiling guides goal-setting rather than diagnosis.
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 online description. Our therapists use ICF-anchored profiling to translate motor planning patterns into functional, everyday goals across occupational therapy and the wider [developmental pathway](/). The AbilityScore® framework makes that functioning profile measurable and trackable over time.Trusted sources
WHO International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) and its Children & Youth derivation; WHO ICD-11 framework for neurodevelopmental motor functions.Next step — Partner with a Pinnacle clinician to translate an ICF functioning profile into an actionable therapy plan — begin here.
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
Watch how motor difficulty shows up across settings: sequencing multi-step actions, fine hand use, dressing and feeding, and joining in play. Variability across contexts is itself diagnostically informative under the ICF model.
Try this at home
When profiling, observe the child performing a familiar multi-step routine (e.g. putting on shoes) versus a novel one — the gap reveals planning and sequencing demands more clearly than a single task.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10
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
Is motor planning difficulty itself an ICF code?
No. The ICF describes functioning, not diagnoses. Motor planning difficulties are captured by mapping their functional impact across codes such as b176 (sequencing complex movements), b147 (psychomotor functions) and relevant Activities & Participation codes — not by a single 'dyspraxia' code.
Why include Environmental Factors in the profile?
Because the ICF is biopsychosocial: support, relationships and adapted products (e1, e3) can substantially ease or amplify functional impact. The same motor pattern can yield very different participation depending on context.
Does an ICF profile replace diagnosis?
No. An ICF functioning profile guides goal-setting and tracking. Any diagnosis and a clinical AbilityScore® are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.