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SEN Parent's Guide/Profound & Multiple Difficulties
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Profound & Multiple Learning Difficulties (PMLD)

Key facts
  • PMLD affects a small but significant number of children
  • Every child with PMLD will have an EHCP and usually attends a special school
  • Communication is individual — learning to 'read' your child is the greatest gift
  • Advances in technology and understanding mean that quality of life continues to improve

What is Profound & Multiple Difficulties?

Children with PMLD have the most complex needs. They have a profound intellectual disability alongside other significant difficulties — often including physical disabilities, sensory impairments, or complex health needs.

These children communicate through very individual means: facial expressions, body movements, sounds, changes in muscle tone, or responses to sensory experiences. Every response is meaningful and important.

Caring for and educating a child with PMLD requires specialist knowledge, deep patience, and genuine love. The focus is on quality of life, communication, relationships, and wellbeing — and every small moment of connection is precious.

👀 What you might notice

Communication and learning
  • Communicating through body language, facial expressions, sounds, or physiological changes
  • Responding to sensory experiences — light, sound, touch, vibration, smell
  • Needing full support with all aspects of daily life
  • Learning through repeated, multi-sensory experiences over time
Additional needs
  • Often having significant physical disabilities
  • May have visual or hearing impairments
  • May have complex medical needs and need regular health support
  • May use specialist equipment like wheelchairs, standing frames, or specialist seating

How schools can help

Sensory curriculum

Learning through carefully planned sensory experiences — light, music, textures, movement

Intensive interaction

Building communication through responsive, individual interaction with familiar adults

Multi-disciplinary team

Speech therapy, physio, OT, nursing, and education working together around the child

Specialist equipment

Adapted seating, communication aids, sensory rooms, soft play, and hydrotherapy

High staffing ratios

Often needing 1:1 or 2:1 adult support throughout the day

Health support

Trained staff managing medication, feeding, and other medical needs during the school day

🏠 What you can do at home

  • You know your child better than anyone — trust your instincts
  • Make time for positive sensory experiences: music, gentle movement, warm water, nature
  • Connect with other PMLD families — they understand in a way others may not
  • Accept help when it's offered, and ask for it when you need it
  • Celebrate moments of connection — a smile, a turn of the head, a change in breathing
  • Remember that rest and respite aren't selfish — they're essential

🤝 Organisations that can help

PMLD Link
Network dedicated to people with PMLD, their families, and professionals.
Sense
Charity for people with complex disabilities. Family support and specialist services.
Cerebra
Charity for families of children with brain conditions. Grants, sleep support, legal advice.
Contact
Information on benefits, equipment, short breaks, and connecting with other families.

🔗 Related conditions

SEN types often overlap. Your child may have more than one area of need. Here are conditions commonly linked to Profound & Multiple Difficulties:

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Severe Learning Difficulty
PMLD represents the most complex end of the learning difficulty spectrum
Physical Disability
Most children with PMLD also have significant physical disabilities
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Multi-Sensory Impairment
Vision and hearing difficulties commonly co-occur with PMLD

Note: This guide is for general information only. Every child is unique, and SEN types often overlap. If you have concerns about your child, speak to your child's school SENCO and your GP. For legal advice on SEN rights, contactIPSEA (free).

← Back to all SEN types