In many communities, families raising children with disabilities face limited access to rehabilitation services, social stigma, and financial strain. In this environment, the Joen Cerebral Palsy Centre has emerged as a grassroots model of hope — strengthening children’s abilities, supporting families, and promoting inclusive futures.
Founded in 2018 by Rose Njoroge and inspired by her son Joel Njenga, the centre was built from lived experience. What began as one mother’s determination to secure better rehabilitation support has evolved into a community-driven initiative focused on affordable, accessible, and child-centred therapy.
Today, Joen Cerebral Palsy Centre provides structured rehabilitation services for children living with cerebral palsy and other developmental disabilities, while also empowering caregivers to play an active role in progress and long-term outcomes.
At the core of the centre’s work is a multidisciplinary approach that recognises each child’s unique strengths and challenges.
Physiotherapy services focus on:
Through structured therapeutic interventions, children are supported in achieving functional movement milestones that increase independence and participation in daily life.
Occupational therapy interventions complement this work by targeting:
By addressing both mobility and functional independence, the centre ensures that rehabilitation goes beyond physical therapy alone.
Education is a fundamental right, and the Joen Cerebral Palsy Centre recognises that therapy must connect directly to school readiness.
The centre supports:
The aim is to ensure that children move confidently from home or therapy-based care into structured educational settings where they can learn, socialise and grow.
Rehabilitation does not end when a therapy session concludes. For many families, continuity of care at home is critical to sustained progress.
The centre therefore provides:
This model strengthens family confidence and transforms caregivers into active partners in their child’s rehabilitation journey.
Beyond direct therapy, Joen Cerebral Palsy Centre plays an important role in community education and disability advocacy.
The centre participates in awareness initiatives including:
Through these engagements, the centre works to:
Raising awareness remains essential in environments where disability is often misunderstood or marginalised.
Looking ahead, the centre plans to introduce weekly aquatic therapy sessions. Swimming and water-based exercises offer additional therapeutic benefits, including:
Aquatic therapy can provide children with a sense of freedom of movement often difficult to achieve on land, while also encouraging social participation.
As the centre continues to grow, so do its ambitions. Its future goals include:
Each of these steps would significantly strengthen service delivery and sustainability.
Joen Cerebral Palsy Centre represents more than a therapy facility — it embodies resilience, lived experience, and community-driven change. By combining structured rehabilitation, caregiver empowerment, educational inclusion and advocacy, the centre continues to transform lives one child at a time.