Noticing your baby prefers turning their head one way? Or struggling with tummy time, feeding, or head shape changes? This free screening guide helps you identify early signs of torticollis so you can take action with confidence.
But here’s the part most parents aren’t told…
Torticollis is not just a “tight neck muscle.”
It’s often connected to your baby’s entire system—including how they move, process sensory input, feed, and regulate.
At Little Roots OT, we take a whole-body, root-cause approach. That means we look beyond neck stretches.
Our lens includes:
Nervous system & sensory processing: How your baby experiences movement, position, and responds to sensory information
Whole-body movement patterns: Core strength, reflexes, vision, and asymmetries throughout the body
Oral function & feeding: Tension, latch challenges, and how the mouth connects to the body
Environmental & positioning factors: Daily routines that may be reinforcing preferences
This screening is your first step—helping you tune into your baby’s patterns and decide if additional support could make a difference.
If concerns come up, early, play-based support can create meaningful shifts in comfort, feeding, and development—often much faster than a “wait and see” approach.
Because when we support the whole baby, we support lasting change.
Noticing your baby prefers turning their head one way? Or struggling with tummy time, feeding, or head shape changes? This free screening guide helps you identify early signs of torticollis so you can take action with confidence.
But here’s the part most parents aren’t told…
Torticollis is not just a “tight neck muscle.”
It’s often connected to your baby’s entire system—including how they move, process sensory input, feed, and regulate.
At Little Roots OT, we take a whole-body, root-cause approach. That means we look beyond neck stretches.
Our lens includes:
Nervous system & sensory processing: How your baby experiences movement, position, and responds to sensory information
Whole-body movement patterns: Core strength, reflexes, vision, and asymmetries throughout the body
Oral function & feeding: Tension, latch challenges, and how the mouth connects to the body
Environmental & positioning factors: Daily routines that may be reinforcing preferences
This screening is your first step—helping you tune into your baby’s patterns and decide if additional support could make a difference.
If concerns come up, early, play-based support can create meaningful shifts in comfort, feeding, and development—often much faster than a “wait and see” approach.
Because when we support the whole baby, we support lasting change.