Eight-year-old David, who suffers from cerebral palsy, has difficulty moving his body and has relied on a wheelchair for years.Also excited about modern technology are the therapists who patiently fit the wearable robot onto the children, cheering and applauding as their young patients make progress.'Motivation to achieve many things in the future'"It makes us very excited to have the exoskeleton and that we can even use it now to achieve all of this,” said 28-year-old physical therapist, Arturo Palafox Sanchez.“It motivates us as therapists that we will be able to achieve many things in the future”."We are seeing results with the children, and we want to continue working and empowering, so that more children in the city and the country have access to this type of rehabilitation, because we are always receiving children who need neurorobotic rehabilitation and that radically changes their lives," said APAC director Guadalupe Maldonado."