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| Living With SMS |
The oral motor and swallowing/feeding difficulties typically begin within the first year of life and improve throughout childhood with therapeutic interventions. Frequently sucking abilities are poor and transitioning to specific food textures are often challenging for parents. Although infrequent, it is not uncommon for children to develop failure to thrive if feeding issues are severe. These may require alternate feeding sources or feeding supplements to assist with growth and development. Services to enhance children with these difficulties can be obtained with specialists such as gastroenterologists, nutritionists, speech-language pathologists and other professionals within early intervention programs. Chewing and mastication are often delayed and food refusals and transitions can be difficult. Often delays in oral motor movements contribute to these problems. Speech Pathology therapeutic interventions can assist with these and can help with oral motor skill development necessary for these functional skills.
In addition to the oral
motor and swallowing/feeding delays, communication skills are frequently delayed
in SMS children. These skills are important for expressing needs and wants,
interacting with family members, fostering education/social development and
transferring into work environments. Expressive speech skills are often delayed
and frequently verbal speech is unintelligible. It is not uncommon that verbal
speech is absent until early school age years. Don't be discouraged if your
child is not talking. Virtually everyone can communicate in some way.
During early childhood years, speech/language pathology services should concurrently focus on the speech/language communication aspects in addition to optimizing oral motor, swallowing and feeding issues. Therapeutic goals of increasing sensory input, fostering movement of the articulators, increasing oral motor endurance and decreasing hypersensitivity to touch in and around the oral cavity are needed to develop skills related to swallowing and speech production. Expressive language should be expanded to phrases and sentences with additional emphasis on auditory comprehension. Home practice programs with exercises and strategies for fostering oral motor, speech and language skills should be included in all therapeutic programs. Goals to enhance overall intelligibility are suggested once a strong language foundation is in place and spontaneously being used by the child.
To obtain more information about speech language pathology services in your state, visit the web site of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association.
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