Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son was always on the cusp of not meeting number of words milestones. At 18 months he had about 8-9 words, while pediatrician said 10 was the milestone (50 average). He never had that huge language explosion that some others kept mentioning to me "just wait, at 2 it will come". Even at 2 and 2.5 he was always on the borderline normal. He was diagnosed with ASD at 3.
Btw, those posts that say "my uncle didn't talk until he was four and now he's a genius" are extremely unhelpful. For every such story there are several others that actually DID end up needing speech therapy.
Absolutely no harm in starting speech therapy early. Wish we had started at 18 months instead of 2.5. We lost out on 1 year of potential progress.
Um then likewise the “my kid had no words at 18 months and is now diagnosed with blah blah” are just as unhelpful.
Why? An early evaluation can do absolutely zero harm. But waiting can.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son was always on the cusp of not meeting number of words milestones. At 18 months he had about 8-9 words, while pediatrician said 10 was the milestone (50 average). He never had that huge language explosion that some others kept mentioning to me "just wait, at 2 it will come". Even at 2 and 2.5 he was always on the borderline normal. He was diagnosed with ASD at 3.
Btw, those posts that say "my uncle didn't talk until he was four and now he's a genius" are extremely unhelpful. For every such story there are several others that actually DID end up needing speech therapy.
Absolutely no harm in starting speech therapy early. Wish we had started at 18 months instead of 2.5. We lost out on 1 year of potential progress.
Um then likewise the “my kid had no words at 18 months and is now diagnosed with blah blah” are just as unhelpful.
Anonymous wrote:DD is 18-months and we are going to a speech therapist next week to help with what I believe is an expressive language delay. She has very few words That she uses consistently (this, door, bath, dada) and other words she says once or twice never to say again, almost like she files them away. She does communicate by pointing and seems to have fairly good receptive communication—for example, she can follow simple directions. Her motor skills seem totally fine. I am wondering for parents who have BTDT how did speech therapy work out, did your child eventually catch up and when? If your child is now in school, do they continue to have speech and/or learning difficulties? My older DS was on the opposite end of the spectrum and had advanced language at this age so it is tough not to compare and worry.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP. Thanks for all these responses! Again, it's encouraging to see the range and reading these I'm glad we are going to get ST even just for an eval and to keep our eyes on things.
Anonymous wrote:My son was always on the cusp of not meeting number of words milestones. At 18 months he had about 8-9 words, while pediatrician said 10 was the milestone (50 average). He never had that huge language explosion that some others kept mentioning to me "just wait, at 2 it will come". Even at 2 and 2.5 he was always on the borderline normal. He was diagnosed with ASD at 3.
Btw, those posts that say "my uncle didn't talk until he was four and now he's a genius" are extremely unhelpful. For every such story there are several others that actually DID end up needing speech therapy.
Absolutely no harm in starting speech therapy early. Wish we had started at 18 months instead of 2.5. We lost out on 1 year of potential progress.