yes and if you think your child might have a tbi go to the ER, not an SLP!! |
Are you sure? When I looked up palilaia, it seemed like it was mostly the repetition of words or phrases. I'm the PP whose kid (like OP's) repeats just the last syllable of words). |
Who said everything is traced to autism? And why are you sensitive about it? This child is at higher risk for asd because of her brother's diagnosis. No one is diagnosing her over the internet, people with similar experiences are sharing theirs. Chill. |
I don't think that it does. I was clarifying based on the PPs response. |
The poster clearly put no ASD, so yes, you are not answering the questions and making it about ASD. OP should seek speech therapy for her child. |
No. OP said "I don't think she has either (so far as I can see now)..." |
So, how is calling it ASD and making this into an ASD conversation helpful? |
Please read more carefully before getting so riled up. |
Actually, you need to read more carefully as instead of it being a speech issue it was related back to an ASD issue. |
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I have an NT 5-yo who tends to mimic speech patterns he comes into contact with, especially with origins that he likes. When he watches cars, he'll talk for the rest of the day with Mater's hick accent. We've twice noticed an odd speech pattern and after investigation, both times he was echoing speech patterns of classmates who he had been spending extra time with.
You might want to see if there is a person in your daughter's life who has a stutter of a similar speech pattern to see if she is imitating. |
| Merld mom, I know that's you. Stop it. Some things really are signs of Asd. Like visual stims. This is indeed one. |
NP, not MERLD mom. Not all differences in speech, behavior, or socialization are ASD signs. Saying one isolated thing is a "sign of ASD" is not very helpful. |
+1 I haven't seen anyone who said "this is ASD". PP clearly has a chip on your shoulder about anyone mentioning autism. Autism is the most common neurodevelopmental disorder, 1 in 68 children. But don't bring that up, even though the girl is at higher risk because of family history! OP clearly said "it's not a stutter", but let's focus the responses on language disorders anyway, with a much higher prevalence of .5%.
Siblings of kids with AS often time have autistic traits without having autism. Anyone in the field knows that. OP, if you have any other reasons for concern, have a developmental pediatrician evaluate her. Good luck. |
+1 I haven't seen anyone who said "this is ASD". PP clearly has a chip on your shoulder about anyone mentioning autism. Autism is the most common neurodevelopmental disorder, 1 in 68 children. But don't bring that up, even though the girl is at higher risk because of family history! OP clearly said "it's not a stutter", but let's focus the responses on language disorders anyway, with a much lower prevalence of .5%.
Siblings of kids with AS often time have autistic traits without having autism. Anyone in the field knows that. OP, if you have any other reasons for concern, have a developmental pediatrician evaluate her. Good luck. |
| OP here. I don't know what merld is or ibd are but will look it up. I think it would be hard to have a speech therapist evaluate her when it's not happening. It seems to happen in clusters of time, like groups of sentences at a time, then nothing weird for hours. Although just now she was playing with pretend food and said"grape-ape", but it was just the one word. I will look into getting a speech evaluation, thanks for the replies. |