Does my child need to see a speech therapist?
Paediatrics
Your child may benefit from as assessment with a speech therapist if he/she presents with (1) communication or (2)feeding difficulties.
If your child has communication difficulties, they may:
- Have poor eye contact
- Have no single words by the age of 18 months
- Not be speaking short sentences (3-4 words) by the age of 3
- Have unclear speech. Generally, you should understand 50% of your child's speech at 2 years old, 70-80% at 3 years old, and 100% by 4 years old
- Have difficulties learning new vocabulary
- Have difficulties learning and understanding grammar and sentence structures
- Have difficulties expressing thoughts and ideas in words verbally and in writing
- Have difficulties following long and complex instructions
- Have difficulties making friends, initiating social interactions and having a conversation
- Have poor academic performance
If your child has feeding difficulties, they may:
- Refuse to drink milk
- Choke on drinking
- Be a fussy eater or poor interest in food
- Avoid certain food textures e.g. mushy or certain food groups e.g. meat or certain food colours or certain food smells
- Be unwilling to try new food
- Have difficulties chewing
- Require distractions to eat
- Sleep feed
- Have long mealtimes e.g. an hour
- Eat non-food items
You and your child may also benefit from an assessment with a speech therapist if you find mealtimes and/or eating with your child significantly stressful.
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