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Spotting Early Signs of Developmental Delay: An ASHA Worker's Guide

ASHA workers can spot developmental delay by checking whether a child meets everyday milestones — smiling, sitting, babbling, walking, pointing, words — at the expected age. The role is to observe, trust parental worry, and refer early, never to diagnose. Persistent lags across areas, or loss of a skill, warrant prompt referral.

Spotting Early Signs of Developmental Delay: An ASHA Worker's Guide
Early Signs of Delay: An ASHA Worker's Guide — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

You are the first set of trusted eyes in your community — and what you notice during a home visit can change a child's whole life.

In short

As an ASHA worker, you can spot early signs of developmental delay by watching whether a child is reaching everyday milestones — smiling, holding the neck, sitting, babbling, walking, pointing and using words — at roughly the expected age. You don't diagnose; you observe, ask the mother simple questions, and refer early when a child seems to be lagging in one or more areas. Trust a parent's worry — it is one of the most reliable early signals you have.

What to watch, age by age

Use these as gentle checkpoints, not pass/fail tests. A child a little behind on one item is usually fine; persistent lags across areas, or loss of a skill already gained, deserve referral.

By 3 months — does the baby look at faces, smile back, and start to hold the head steady?
By 6 months — does the baby turn to sounds, reach for things, and make babbling noises?
By 9–12 months — does the baby sit without support, respond to their name, babble ("ba-ba", "da-da"), and show or point?
By 18 months — is the child walking, using a few single words, and pointing to show you things?
By 2 years — is the child joining two words ("more milk"), following simple instructions, and walking and running well?
By 3 years — is the child speaking in short sentences, playing near other children, and feeding themselves?

Always refer promptly if you see:

  • Loss of a skill the child once had (stopped babbling, stopped walking) — at any age
  • A floppy or very stiff body, or one side used much more than the other
  • No eye contact, no smile, or no response to sound
  • The mother's persistent worry, even if you cannot see the sign yourself

How to act on what you see

You are a screener and a connector, not a diagnostician. Note the concern simply, reassure the family without alarming them, and route the child to the nearest medical officer, RBSK team or a developmental centre for a proper check. Early referral, even when you are unsure, is always the safe choice — many delays improve greatly when support starts young.

The Pinnacle way

A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a home visit or a checklist. Your role is the vital first step: spotting and routing. From there, our team can establish a clear baseline through the AbilityScore®, build a plan, and support the family with speech therapy and other developmental care. Learn more about [what we do](/).

Trusted sources

WHO and UNICEF Nurturing Care Framework for early childhood development; CDC developmental milestone checklists; Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram (RBSK) screening guidance.

Next step — Spotted a child you're worried about? Help the family book a developmental check.

This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

What to watch

Loss of a skill the child once had at any age; a floppy or very stiff body; no eye contact, smile or response to sound; persistent lags across several milestone areas; and a mother's ongoing worry even when no sign is obvious.

Try this at home

Always ask the mother what worries her, in her own words. Parental concern is one of the most reliable early signals — note it and refer, even if you cannot see the sign yourself.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-11 · reviewed every 365 days

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

Can I diagnose developmental delay during a home visit?

No. Your role is to observe milestones, listen to the mother's concerns, and refer early. A diagnosis is made only by qualified clinicians after a proper assessment — never from a home visit or checklist.

Should I refer a child even if I am not sure there is a delay?

Yes. When in doubt, refer. Early referral is always the safe choice — many delays improve greatly when support begins young, and a proper check can quickly reassure the family if all is well.

What is the single most important sign to act on?

Loss of a skill the child had before — such as stopping babbling or stopping walking — at any age. Also act strongly on a mother's persistent worry, even if you cannot see the sign yourself.

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