conversation skills
When should a health worker escalate delayed conversation skills?
Conversation skills — turn-taking, answering and staying on topic — develop through the toddler and preschool years. A frontline health worker should escalate to a doctor or developmental check when a child is clearly behind peers, has lost words or social skills once present, shows little response to name or speech, or when a parent is worried. Referral is not a diagnosis; it opens early support. A hearing check is often the sensible first step, as undetected hearing loss is common and treatable.
A frontline health worker who notices a child struggling with back-and-forth talk is doing vital, early work — knowing when to refer turns that observation into timely help.
In short
Conversation skills — taking turns, answering questions, staying on topic, asking and responding — build steadily through the toddler and preschool years. As an ASHA or PHC worker, escalate to a doctor or developmental check when a child is clearly behind same-age peers, has lost words or social skills once present, shows little response to their name or speech, or when a worried parent asks for help. Referral is not a diagnosis — it opens the door to early support, which works best.What to watch and when to escalate
Use these practical age signposts during home visits or PHC contacts. Escalate if you see:- By 12 months — no babbling, no gestures (waving, pointing), no response to their name.
- By 18 months — no single meaningful words, not following simple instructions.
- By 24 months — fewer than ~50 words, no two-word phrases, not copying others.
- By 3 years — speech hard for family to understand, not answering simple questions, not joining short back-and-forth talk.
- Any age — loss of words or social skills the child once had (this needs prompt review), no eye contact or shared attention, or a parent who is worried.
When in doubt, refer — early is always safer than waiting.
The science, briefly
Conversation sits within ICF communication (d3) and depends on hearing, language, social attention and thinking working together. So a first step is often a hearing check, because undetected hearing loss is a common, treatable cause. A general developmental review then sorts out what kind of support a child needs. Acting at a screening contact, not waiting for a later visit, is what gives children the best start.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 or a single observation. Our clinicians look at the whole child — hearing, language, play and connection. Learn more about conversation skills and how our speech therapy team supports back-and-forth talk.Trusted sources
WHO ICF framework for communication activities (d3); CDC developmental milestones and "Learn the Signs, Act Early"; American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (asha.org) guidance on early language and referral.Next step — Trust what you've noticed and refer without delay. Help the family book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician for a calm, clear review.
What to watch
Escalate if: no babbling or gestures by 12 months; no words by 18 months; fewer than ~50 words or no two-word phrases by 24 months; speech unclear or no back-and-forth talk by 3 years. Any age — loss of words or social skills once present needs prompt review, as do no response to name, no eye contact, or a worried parent. A hearing check is often the first step.
Try this at home
During a home visit, watch one short play or feeding moment — does the child respond to their name, look back when spoken to, and take a turn (sound, gesture or word)? Note what you see; this simple observation is valuable clinical information for the doctor.
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
Is a quiet or shy child always a concern?
Not at all. Many children are shy or slow to warm up and still understand and use language well at home. The concern is when a child is clearly behind same-age peers across settings, does not respond to their name or speech, or has lost skills once present — then a check is wise.
Should I arrange a hearing test first?
Often yes. Undetected hearing loss is a common and treatable reason a child struggles with conversation. A hearing check is a sensible early step, alongside a general developmental review by a clinician.
Does referral mean the child has a disorder?
No. Referral is simply an opportunity for a qualified clinician to look closely and decide what support, if any, helps. It is never a diagnosis, and early support works beautifully at this age.