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Toddler Talking
Common Speech Problems in Young Children By Jacqueline Bodnar
When Vickie Muhammad's son was born he passed all his newborn screenings. Yet as he began to grow, she suspected something was wrong. He wasn't picking up on words at a rate that most of the charts showed he should be, and she had to constantly talk loudly to get his attention.
She insisted on a referral to a speech therapist from her pediatrician. The therapist began by giving him another hearing test. "This test showed that my son had a hearing loss," says Muhammad. "We got hearing aides and he was given speech therapy."
Little did she know, her son's hearing loss was progressive. "Thanks to the wonderful speech therapist and teachers, today he is enrolled in an oral school that teaches him how to speak and listen," says Muhammad.
Sandra Coulson, president of the International Association of Orofacial Myology (IAOM), is one such specialist that gets the referrals. As an Orofacial Myologist, she specializes in working with the muscles of the face and tongue. These muscles facilitate proper movement of the facial muscles to be able to create specific speech sounds.
- Developmental abnormalities


