Pediatric


The “Late Talker”

Pediatricians often dismiss speech and language delays as “late talking” and may suggest that you “wait six months” before referring your child to a Speech Therapist. However, you as the parent are the expert on your child and his/her development. If you feel that “late talking” is a need that should be addressed, discuss the…

Social Skill Development

Pragmatics, or the use of social language, begins to develop at a very young age. Even young babies understand that when they babble, they take turns with Mommy and Daddy. Other social skills include: eye contact, joint attention, turn-taking, and nonverbal language such as gestures, body posture, and tone of voice. Children with autism, PDD,…

Sign Language

Traditionally, sign language is thought of as the method of communication for the deaf population. While this is true, sign language has a much broader use than only the deaf population. Sign language is often used to bridge communication skills when verbal (spoken) communication has not yet developed, is delayed, or is not possible. Sign…

Language Development and Delays

Generally, children begin to say their first words around their first birthday. By age two, most children are combining two or more words into phrases. A delay occurs when language (vocabulary, length of sentence, grammar, etc.) develops more slowly than is normal, or fails to develop at all. In some cases, a child may begin…

Feeding Difficulties in Children

Many children present with difficulties feeding. This could be due to a prenatal (before birth) factor such as a genetic syndrome, premature delivery, or to factors after birth (failure to thrive, a stroke, head injury, or degenerative disease process). Severity of feeding difficulties range from mild (the child may have difficulty with a particular texture…

Deaf/Hard of Hearing/Cochlear Implants

Children who are deaf or hard of hearing experience the world differently than hearing children. Some deaf children use sign language, some use speech, and some a combination (called total communication). Children who are deaf or hard of hearing benefit greatly from speech therapy focused on language development (in spoken English or sign language) and…

Autism

Autism is a term used to describe a group of symptoms in a child that include: a delay or total lack of development of spoken language, delayed/disordered social skills and peer relationships, and use of stereotypic behaviors repetitively. Autism is diagnosed by a psychologist/psychiatrist. Treatment should be a team approach. Members of the team may…

Articulation/Speech Development and Delays

Children with articulation delays have plenty to say, but no one can seem to understand what it is they are saying! These children are frequently unintelligible (very difficult to understand) and may present with a predictable pattern of error (for example, little Johnny always leaves the last sound off of each word he speaks. So,…

Early Intervention

Early intervention is a term used to apply to treatment at an early age. Studies prove that when therapy is initiated early on (prior to school age), the prognosis for improvement is much greater.