When Melissa asks her two-year-old daughter Emily a question… whether it’s what game she’d like to play, or whether she’d like milk or water to drink…
It’s often either met with silence or… a quiet mumble that’s almost impossible to make out.
Until recently, Melissa wasn’t too worried… “The pediatrician had said that sometimes between 18 months and 2 years you see a big difference… and once again we didn’t even notice much of an effort… that she was even trying. Her ‘mamma’ wasn’t even ‘mamma’ it was ‘maaaa’.”
The National Institute of Health estimates almost 10-percent of all children have a speech delay or disorder.
The cause can be physical, like a cleft pallet… or developmental, like autism. But it sometimes it’s a mystery… it’s a child like Emily who seems normal in every other way.
“Her comprehension is perfect, she understands everything,” says Mrs. Watrobsky.
“There are instances where we just don’t know,” says Speech Pathologist Karen Darrow, “Sometimes environmental things like the parents may talk for the child too much.”
“With her gestures and things I was able to catch on a lot more as to what she wanted so I was responding to her grunts and her groans,” adds Melissa.
Emily now gets speech therapy. one key strategy therapists use, and recommend to parents, is to put a child in situations where they want to talk
“And it sounds a little bit hard but giving them a toy and taking it away and I call it sabotage. Setting up a situation where it would be to their benefit to talk,” says Mrs. Darrow.
That, along with extra exercises and a lot of encouragement, and the hope is Emily will soon will catch up…
“Yea, I wouldn’t be surprised if in a couple years if she’s not quiet for a moment,” laughs Melissa. |