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behavior awareness

When to escalate concerns about behaviour awareness

Behaviour awareness — noticing one's own actions and adjusting to a caregiver's cue — develops through the toddler years. A frontline health worker should escalate to the PHC medical officer or a developmental check when a child consistently does not respond to their name, shows no shared attention, cannot follow a simple one-step request by age 2, or has lost a skill once held. Escalation means routing for review, not diagnosing; parent concern alone is reason enough to refer early.

When to escalate concerns about behaviour awareness
When should a health worker escalate behaviour awareness concerns? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

Every ASHA who pauses to notice how a child watches, responds and self-corrects is already doing skilled developmental work.

In short

Behaviour awareness — a child noticing how they act, reading a caregiver's cue and adjusting (an ICF d1, learning and applying knowledge skill) — grows steadily through the toddler and preschool years. As a frontline worker, escalate when a child consistently does not respond to their name or to simple correction, shows no shared attention or eye contact, cannot follow a one-step request by age 2, or has lost a skill they once had. Escalation means routing to the PHC medical officer or a developmental check — not labelling the child. Early routing turns a small worry into early help.

What to watch and when to escalate

Most differences settle with time and gentle play. Escalate (refer up) when you see:
  • No response to name or voice by 12 months, or no shared looking between a toy and a caregiver.
  • No simple instruction-following ("give me the cup") by around 2 years.
  • Little awareness of others' reactions — does not seek comfort, does not change behaviour when gently stopped.
  • Skill loss — words, eye contact or social smiling that were present and have faded. This always needs prompt review.
  • Family concern — a parent's worry is valuable clinical information; act on it.

When any of these persist across visits, or appear alongside delays in talking, walking or play, refer to the medical officer the same week rather than waiting for the next round.

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 checklist in the field. Drawing on 2.5 billion+ data points and 25 million+ therapy sessions, our clinicians build a strengths-first picture of how a child notices and adjusts. Learn more about behaviour awareness and how our child psychology team supports families after a referral.

Trusted sources

WHO ICF framework (learning and applying knowledge, d1); CDC "Learn the Signs, Act Early" developmental monitoring; AAP developmental surveillance guidance via healthychildren.org.

Next step — Trust what you observe in the home. Book a developmental assessment so a Pinnacle clinician can review the child calmly and guide the family.

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

Escalate if a child consistently does not respond to their name by 12 months, shows no shared attention or eye contact, cannot follow a one-step request by about 2 years, does not change behaviour when gently corrected, or has lost a skill once present. Any skill loss needs prompt medical review. Persistent flags across visits, or parent worry, warrant referral to the PHC medical officer the same week.

Try this at home

Note across two or three visits whether the child looks toward a caregiver when something happens, responds to their name, and follows one simple instruction. Recording when and how often gives the medical officer a clear, useful picture.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 540 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

Does escalating mean the child has a disorder?

No. Escalation simply routes the child for a calm clinical review. It is not a diagnosis — it means a qualified clinician should take a closer, structured look so any support can start early.

At what age does behaviour awareness become meaningful to assess?

Simple awareness — responding to name, shared looking, reacting to a caregiver's cue — emerges across the first two years. Following a one-step request and adjusting to gentle correction is reasonable to expect by about age 2, so persistent gaps after this are worth routing.

Should I refer if only the parent is worried?

Yes. A parent's daily observation is valuable clinical information. Persistent parent concern is itself a good reason to refer to the medical officer for a developmental check.

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