Stuttering interrupts the flow of speech, but so do many other things. All of us repeat words or syllables occasionally; no one has speech that is perfectly smooth. We all hesitate, insert noises or words, get syllables mixed up, go back and change our sentences, or try to say two words at the same time and end up confused or stuck for a second. The young child who is still struggling to master certain sounds, vocabulary, sentence arrangement, and the social pressures of talking will naturally stumble more often than adults and older children. The smoothness or fluency of everyone's speech also varies tremendously with internal feelings and external circumstances. These variations in fluency are far greater in the young child.
Is my child stuttering?
If your child has difficulty speaking and tends to hesitate on or repeat certain syllables, words, or phrases he may have a stuttering problem. But he may simply be going through periods of normal disfluency that most children experience as they learn to speak.
What causes stuttering?
There are four factors most likely to contribute to the development of stuttering:
How many children stutter?
Some 20 percent of all children go through a stage of development during which they encounter disfluencies severe enough to be a concern to their parents. Approximately 5 percent of all children go through a period of stuttering that lasts six months or more. Three-quarters of those will recover by late childhood, leaving about 1 percent with a long-term problem. The best prevention tool is early intervention.
Is stuttering caused by emotional or psychological problems?
Children and adults who stutter are no more likely to have psychological or emotional problems than children and adults who do not. There is no reason to believe that emotional trauma causes stuttering.
I read about a new cure for stuttering. Is there such a thing?
There are no instant miracle cures for stuttering. Therapy, electronic devices and even drugs are not an overnight process. However, a specialist in stuttering can help not only children but also teenagers, young adults and even older adults make significant progress toward fluency.
If the stuttering persists beyond 3 to 6 months, or is particularly severe, you may want to seek help from a speech-language pathologist who specializes in stuttering right away.