Why Early Intervention?

Why Early Intervention when he’s just a late talker?

“We now know the earlier the intervention, the better the brain can reorganize.” Today, parents are generally told to look for signs of delay early, even in a baby’s first year, and seek help. No one should assume that a silent 2-year-old is a budding genius; silence may be a sign of hearing loss or a neurological disorder.”

All of us hear the same thing “just a late talker” which may be the case. However early intervention therapy is harmless -and it may stimulate your child to speak even sooner. If your child begins to speak fluently after two sessions -no more therapy! If your child does have a speech disorder vs a simple delay in speech, however -Early Intervention not only provides the child the best chance -it also could help prevent secondary behavioral or self-esteem problems due to frustrations from not being understood, or from being teased. And what if your late talker who is “so bright” and passes all developmental milestones on time or early ends up being apraxic? Apraxia, you may think…never heard of it -what are the odds?!

Not every late talker with a speech delay or disorder has apraxia -however, apraxia is not rare; many people just do not know the name or symptoms yet. The problem with this is that children with apraxia benefit greatly from early intervention. Apraxia does NOT self-resolve. The prognosis for a child with severe apraxia to one day speaks like everyone else is greater for a child who receives a diagnosis and appropriate therapy at 3, than that of a child who first receives a diagnosis and appropriate therapy at 6. So why are some children with apraxia diagnosed after early intervention years?

According to Dr. Diane Paul-Brown, director of clinical issues in speech-language pathology for the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association in Rockville, Maryland, “We now know the earlier the intervention, the better the brain can reorganize.” Today, parents are generally told to look for signs of delay early, even in a baby’s first year, and seek help. No one should assume that a silent 2-year-old is a budding genius; silence may be a sign of hearing loss or a neurological disorder.”

This advice is based in part on studies showing that children with speech impairments are more likely to have reading and social problems later. Working with very young children, with malleable brain connections, may rewire defective connections. From the book Developmental Apraxia of Speech, by Hall, Jordan, and Robin, from”Working with Preschoolers Exhibiting DAS (Apraxia of Speech),” page 174:

“…Lohr (1978) stated that with her population of nonverbal clients with apraxia, ‘children who were younger when we began working with them progressed more rapidly’ (p. 6). Our experience has been that the overall outcome has been best for those children with DAS who were identified as possibly exhibiting DAS and received services as very young children…”

A parent with an essentially nonverbal child may search on the internet under the keywords “late talker”, “nonverbal”, “speech delay” or “delayed speech”, but unless they know the disorder called apraxia, they will not search under “apraxia” on the internet. Even worse, apraxia also goes by a bunch of other names that are used interchangeably, such as “dyspraxia,” “DAS,” “motor planning disorder,” etc. Additionally, the words neurologically based can be misleading to parents; most children with apraxia have above average intelligence, and parents may not believe that their non-verbal child who is SO intelligent can have a condition that may be neurologically based. In fact, nobody knows for sure where apraxia comes from. Hopefully, as awareness is raised, more research will be done to find out more about this frustrating and confusing condition called apraxia.

Of course, there are other factors to consider, aside from the age of identification, when making a prognosis of an apraxic child’s future success at communicating verbally. These include the severity of the apraxia, frequency, and appropriateness of therapy, attention level of the child, and parental involvement.

LISA GENG

Author and Executive Director at The Cherab Foundation

Lisa Geng is an accomplished author, mother, founder, and president of the CHERAB Foundation. She is a patented inventor and creator in the fashion, toy, and film industries. After the early diagnosis of her two young children with severe apraxia, hypotonia, sensory processing disorder, ADHD, and CAPD, she dedicated her life to nonprofit work and pilot studies. Lisa is the co-author of the highly acclaimed book “The Late Talker” (St Martin’s Press 2003). She has hosted numerous conferences, including one overseen by a medical director from the NIH for her protocol using fish oils as a therapeutic intervention. Lisa currently holds four patents and patents pending on a nutritional composition. She is a co-author of a study that used her proprietary nutritional composition published in a National Institute of Health-based, peer-reviewed medical journal.

Additionally, Lisa has been serving as an AAN Immunization Panel parent advocate since 2015 and is a member of CUE through Cochrane US. Currently working on her second book, “The Late Talker Grows Up,” she also serves as an executive producer of “Late Talkers Silent Voices.” Lisa Geng lives on the Treasure Coast of Florida.