social – initiation
When to escalate if a child cannot initiate social contact
Social initiation is when a child starts an interaction — a glance, point, reach, babble or shared toy. A frontline worker should escalate when initiation is clearly absent for the child's age signpost, has been lost after once appearing, or travels with delays in words, eye contact or response to name. A caregiver's concern is itself a reason to refer. This is a referral decision, not a diagnosis — early developmental review gives the best outcomes.
A child who rarely starts contact — a glance, a reach, a babble towards you — is still telling us something, and a frontline worker who notices is doing vital early work.
In short
Social initiation means the child starts an interaction: catching your eye, reaching, pointing, bringing a toy to share, calling for attention or beginning a back-and-forth. Escalate to a medical officer or developmental check when initiation is clearly absent for the child's age, has dropped away after once being present, or travels with other delays in language, eye contact or response to name. This is not a diagnosis — it is a referral decision so support can start early, when it works best.What to watch — and when to escalate
By rough age signposts, gentle initiation should grow steadily:- By ~9–12 months — shares smiles, follows a point, reaches up to be picked up, babbles to get your attention.
- By ~12–18 months — points to show interest, brings objects to share, responds to their name.
- By ~24 months — uses words or gestures to start an interaction, joins simple to-and-fro play.
Escalate for a developmental check when you see:
- No initiation at all at the expected signpost — the child never starts contact, only responds (or not even that).
- Loss of a skill — eye contact, pointing or words that were present and have faded. Any regression warrants prompt review.
- Initiation delay plus other flags — few words, no response to name, little shared smiling or pointing.
- Parent concern — a caregiver's worry is reliable clinical information; act on it.
When in doubt, refer rather than "wait and watch" — early referral costs little and gains much.
The science
Social initiation maps to the ICF domain of interpersonal interactions (d7) — a foundation for language and learning. WHO and AAP guidance both favour structured developmental monitoring with prompt referral on concern, because early intervention measurably improves outcomes.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. Learn more about social initiation and how our speech therapy team builds back-and-forth connection through play.Trusted sources
WHO ICF interpersonal-interaction framework (d7); AAP/healthychildren.org developmental monitoring and referral guidance; CDC "Learn the Signs, Act Early" milestones.Next step — Don't wait. Refer for a developmental assessment so a Pinnacle clinician can review the child's milestones early.
What to watch
Escalate when a child shows no social initiation at all by the expected age signpost (sharing smiles and following a point by ~9–12 months, pointing to show and responding to name by ~12–18 months, starting interactions with words or gestures by ~24 months), when a once-present skill like eye contact or pointing has faded, or when initiation delay travels with few words or no response to name. A caregiver's worry is itself a reason to refer.
Try this at home
Keep a one-line note during home visits: does the child ever start contact — a look, reach, point or sound — or only respond? Noting who begins the interaction 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
Is no social initiation always a sign of autism?
No. Reduced initiation can have many causes — hearing difficulty, global developmental delay, or simply a slower start. It is a reason for a clinician's developmental check, never a diagnosis on its own.
Should I wait and watch, or refer now?
If initiation is clearly absent for the age signpost, has been lost after once appearing, or comes with other delays, refer now. Early referral costs little and early support works best.
What counts as social initiation in a young child?
Any time the child *starts* contact: catching your eye, reaching to be picked up, pointing to show interest, bringing a toy to share, babbling for attention, or beginning back-and-forth play.