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An overview of childhood stuttering, including its definition, primary symptoms, development, consequences, causes, and current theories. It also discusses the prevalence of stuttering and the importance of early intervention for preventing chronic stuttering and its negative social and emotional consequences.
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^ Typically begins between ages 3 and 5 ^ As the disorder progresses, children arelikely to develop reactions to stuttering...
^ Tension and struggle in their speechmusculature ^ More advanced types of speech disfluencies ^ Concern or anxiety about their speakingabilities
After Yaruss (1998)
Click for larger
picture
^ If one family member stutters, there is anincreased chance that another familymember will also stutter ^ The few twin studies that have beenconducted show only 50% concordance forMZ twins, suggesting that there are alsoenvironmental influences
^ If children do not recover by age 6 or 7,they are likely to develop chronicstuttering
^ Older children rarely achieve normalfluency, and the negative consequencesincrease over time ^ Negative social and emotionalconsequences can be minimized withappropriate early intervention
^ Certain risk factors can provide someclues:
^ Number, nature, and types of speechdisfluencies ^ Length of time the child has been stuttering ^ Family history of stuttering ^ Child’s reactions to stuttering ^ Family’s reactions to stuttering (parent’slevel of concern and attempts to help)
^ Speech-language pathologists (SLPs),licensed and certified by the
American
Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) Not all SLPs are comfortable withstuttering, so there has been a movetoward specialization
^ Helping children learn to speak morefluently
^ Changing the
timing
and
tension
of speech
production ^ Helping parents learn to facilitatechildren’s fluency in everyday speakingsituations
^ Parents can change their own speech andmanage children’s speaking situations tohelp them speak fluently