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Just Diagnosed with Cerebral Palsy in Yukon

You're not behind. There's no timeline. Start wherever you're ready and go at your own pace. Everything on this page is free.

Right Now

You're not alone. Whatever you're feeling right now is normal.

Your child has cerebral palsy. It affects movement and posture, but it doesn't define who they are. With the right therapies starting early, many children make incredible progress.

Who to call today

Cerebral Palsy Canada: 1-613-235-2144

They'll connect you with local resources and parent support.

Medical note

Make sure your child's medical team is monitoring for hip displacement, seizures, and vision — all common with CP. Ask about scheduling these screenings.

A note about late-night Googling

We've all done it. At 2am you'll find yourself reading something terrifying written in 1997 that doesn't reflect where things are today. If you're spiraling, close the laptop and come back here tomorrow. The information on this page is current, Canadian, and reviewed. You're going to be okay.

When You're Ready — The Important Stuff

These programs have waitlists — some are months long. Applying now means you'll be closer to the front when you need them. None of this is urgent today. But when you have the energy, start here.

Disability Tax Credit (DTC)

Opens the door to $200/month in child benefits, $90,000 in RDSP grants, and several other tax credits.

How to apply:Ask your child's doctor to fill out form T2201. That's it.

Read the full DTC guide

Yukon provincial programs

Family Supports for Children with Disabilities (FSCD)

Assessment, family support, respite, and therapy services for children with developmental disabilities.

About waitlists

Apply for everything on this list even if you're not ready to use the services yet. You can always decline when your name comes up, but you can't get back the time you spent not on the list. Think of it as holding your place in line.

The Paperwork

Nobody tells you that a disability diagnosis comes with a mountain of paperwork. Here's what you need and where to keep it. Get a folder (physical or digital). Label it. Everything goes in there.

Documents to gather

  • 1Get a copy of the neurologist or pediatrician's diagnostic report
  • 2Request documentation of the CP type (spastic, dyskinetic, ataxic, mixed) and GMFCS level
  • 3Ask for MRI results and keep copies
  • 4Document current functional abilities and equipment needs
  • 5Start a therapy log to track progress across providers

Always have copies of

  • Child's health card
  • Social Insurance Number (SIN) — apply if you don't have one
  • Birth certificate
  • All therapy reports and progress notes
  • School records and IEP documents
  • Receipts for all medical expenses, therapy, equipment, travel

Track your expenses

Starting today, keep every receipt for anything related to your child's condition: therapy sessions, medications, equipment, mileage to appointments, parking at the hospital. These are claimable on your taxes.

View Tax Calendar

Building Your Team

Raising a child with Cerebral Palsyisn't something you do alone. Here are the people and organizations who can help.

National organizations

Cerebral Palsy Canada

National coordination body for cerebral palsy awareness, research, and support across Canada.

NationalWebsite

Recommended therapies

Here are the therapies typically recommended for Cerebral Palsy:

  • Physiotherapy
  • Occupational therapy
  • Speech-language pathology
View full therapy plan

Specialists to request

  • Pediatric neurologist
  • Physiatrist (rehabilitation medicine specialist)
  • Physiotherapist specializing in pediatric or neurological conditions
  • Occupational therapist for adaptive equipment and daily living
  • Speech-language pathologist (if speech or swallowing affected)
  • Orthotist for bracing and mobility aids

You are the expert on your child. The doctors are consultants. Don't be afraid to ask questions, disagree, or get a second opinion.

Looking Ahead

You don't need to think about any of this today. Bookmark this section and come back when you're ready — whether that's next month or next year.

RDSP (Registered Disability Savings Plan)

The government will give your child up to $90,000 over their lifetime — but only if you open this account. You need the DTC first. Once approved, open an RDSP even if you can't contribute. The government deposits bonds for low-income families automatically.

RDSP Guide

Henson Trust

If your child will receive provincial disability support as an adult, a regular inheritance could disqualify them. A Henson Trust protects the inheritance without affecting benefits. You don't need to set this up now — but when you write your will, make sure your lawyer knows about Henson Trusts.

Education rights in Yukon

Yukon uses Individual Education Plans for students with special needs. The territory has learning assistance teachers and educational assistants in schools. For specialized services not available in the territory, medical travel support is provided.

Your Rights guide

Turning 18

Children's services end at age 18 (19 in BC). Adult disability programs have separate applications and often long waitlists. This feels far away. It comes faster than you think. But you don't need to worry about it now — just know it's covered in our guide.

Turning 18 Guide

Home modifications and assistive devices

Provincial programs can fund home modifications, wheelchairs, communication devices, and other assistive technology.

Tax planning

Most families of children with disabilities leave $10,000+ per year in unclaimed benefits.

You're Not Alone

Thousands of Canadian families navigate this path every year. Connecting with others who understand can make all the difference.

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This directory grows because people in the community help us find what we've missed. Let us know about organizations, programs, or services across Canada.