Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not OP, but same situation here. My 18 months old boy does not respond to his name, good eye contact, great gross/fine motor skills, loves pretend play/human interaction/greeting people, and only has few words. We speak 3 languages at home, and he grabs things by himself, and rarely doing the pointing (he does point at moon/star/bird/dog in the sky once in a while). His pediatrician refer us to do autism screening because mainly he does not respond to his name & not pointing enough. May I ask how ENT do the hearing test for toddler because my little one cries hysterically & not cooperating everytime at doctor office?
Not sure why you're not doing the autism evaluation if your pediatrician suggested it. Not responding to one's name and not pointing "enough" could possibly be signals of autism, but there's so many factors related to social and communication behaviors and repetitive movements that need to be evaluated as well. For example if you do the autism evaluation at kennedy Krieger at Johns Hopkins for example, it's a multi-day process with participation of a developmental pediatrician, a physical therapist and a speech therapist. It's not something Internet strangers can evaluate for you after reading a few sentences from you.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks! His hearing is fine! I agree that Autism is not the end of the world , but I am trying to get the exact issue so that we can treat/focus accordingly!
Anonymous wrote:Not OP, but same situation here. My 18 months old boy does not respond to his name, good eye contact, great gross/fine motor skills, loves pretend play/human interaction/greeting people, and only has few words. We speak 3 languages at home, and he grabs things by himself, and rarely doing the pointing (he does point at moon/star/bird/dog in the sky once in a while). His pediatrician refer us to do autism screening because mainly he does not respond to his name & not pointing enough. May I ask how ENT do the hearing test for toddler because my little one cries hysterically & not cooperating everytime at doctor office?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he have 20 words or is he non verbal? Because 20 words at 22 months with no other red flags is not alarming
-sped teacher
He says words randomly and may not repeat words he used again. Sometimes he just imitates word said by others ,he don't know what it means and never repeats. 20 words includes every word he said so far at least once.Let me list words he used mom, dad, dog, up, down, round, cat( he means what he says) . Happy, this , good ,clean (he doesn't know what it means). I am not sure if it is 20 , but 10-15 for sure!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, your child is fine. Bilingual kids often accumulate words slower at the beginning, though the delay disappears over time. You can try another hearing opinion, but nothing you said sounds super concerning.
Not always true. Bi/multilingual kids just don't differentiate the languages yet; words are just words at that stage.
Anonymous wrote:OP, your child is fine. Bilingual kids often accumulate words slower at the beginning, though the delay disappears over time. You can try another hearing opinion, but nothing you said sounds super concerning.
Anonymous wrote:^also they can do some hearing testing by putting an earbud in the child's ear and measuring the vibrational bounce back. Sometimes it is hard to get the ear bud properly placed in a fussy child. But, audiologists are usually used to kids, so they are patient and have some tricks to try.
The problem is that this hearing testing is basic and doesn't reveal a lot of information about hearing at different pitch or volumes.
Anonymous wrote:Not OP, but same situation here. My 18 months old boy does not respond to his name, good eye contact, great gross/fine motor skills, loves pretend play/human interaction/greeting people, and only has few words. We speak 3 languages at home, and he grabs things by himself, and rarely doing the pointing (he does point at moon/star/bird/dog in the sky once in a while). His pediatrician refer us to do autism screening because mainly he does not respond to his name & not pointing enough. May I ask how ENT do the hearing test for toddler because my little one cries hysterically & not cooperating everytime at doctor office?
Anonymous wrote:I would assume his name is just another word and not attach any special importance.