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My child suddenly lost skills — is this an emergency?

A genuine, sudden loss of skills your child already had is a medical priority — see a doctor promptly, today if it came on fast or with seizures, drowsiness, fever or injury. Regression needs a doctor's assessment first, not a therapy waitlist. Trust what you're seeing; therapy follows once the medical picture is clear.

My child suddenly lost skills — is this an emergency?
Child suddenly lost skills — is it an emergency? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

When a child who was babbling, walking or naming things suddenly stops — your instinct to act fast is exactly right.

In short

Yes — a genuine, sudden loss of skills your child already had (speech, social engagement, walking, hand use, or alertness) is a medical priority and should be seen by a doctor promptly, today if it came on quickly. Regression is never a "wait and see" situation; it needs a doctor's assessment first, not a therapy waitlist. Trust what you're seeing — parents are usually the first to notice, and you are not overreacting.

What to do — a quick checklist

Seek emergency care now (call your doctor / go to hospital) if alongside the skill loss your child has:
  • A seizure, fainting, or sudden floppiness or stiffness
  • Difficulty breathing, a high fever, or a stiff neck with drowsiness
  • A recent head injury, a fall, or a suspected poisoning
  • Sudden weakness on one side, slurred speech, or unequal pupils
  • Becoming hard to wake, very drowsy, or unresponsive

Arrange a same-week doctor's visit if the loss is gradual or without the above, and note:

  • Which skills were lost — words, babble, eye contact, pointing, walking, feeding, toileting
  • When you first noticed, and whether it came on over days or weeks
  • Any illness, fever, new medicine, or stressful change beforehand
  • A short video of how your child is now versus an older clip of them doing the skill

Why regression is treated seriously

Losing established skills is different from a delay in reaching them. A child not yet doing something may simply need more time; a child who had a skill and lost it needs a doctor to understand why. Causes range widely — from a treatable infection or a seizure disorder to developmental conditions — and several are very time-sensitive. That is why the first step is a medical review by your paediatrician or a neurologist, who can decide what investigations are needed. Therapy has an important role afterwards, but it follows the medical picture, not before it.

The Pinnacle way

Once a doctor has reviewed your child, structured developmental support can begin. At Pinnacle, any clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care — never from a screen, a score or this page alone. Our [early-intervention](/) and speech therapy teams work alongside your treating doctor, so medical answers and developmental progress move together. You do not have to navigate this on your own.

Trusted sources

Guided by WHO and CDC "Learn the Signs. Act Early." guidance that any loss of previously acquired skills warrants prompt professional review, and by American Academy of Pediatrics advice on when developmental changes need a doctor's assessment.

Next step — if the skill loss was sudden or comes with any emergency sign above, seek medical care today; otherwise book a same-week doctor's review and reach our clinical team on WhatsApp +91 91001 81181 for support after.

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

Treat as an emergency now if skill loss comes with a seizure, sudden floppiness or stiffness, drowsiness, high fever with stiff neck, breathing difficulty, recent head injury, or one-sided weakness. A gradual loss without these still needs a same-week doctor's review.

Try this at home

Film a 30-second clip of your child now and find an older video of them doing the skill they lost — side by side, these help your doctor far more than words alone.

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

Is losing skills the same as being slow to learn them?

No — and the difference matters. A child who is simply taking longer to reach a milestone often just needs more time and support. A child who genuinely had a skill — a word, eye contact, walking — and then lost it is showing regression, which needs a doctor's assessment promptly rather than a watch-and-wait approach.

When is it a true emergency rather than a same-week visit?

Seek emergency care immediately if the skill loss comes with a seizure, sudden floppiness or stiffness, difficulty breathing, high fever with a stiff neck and drowsiness, a recent head injury or poisoning, sudden one-sided weakness, slurred speech, or your child becoming hard to wake. Without these, arrange a doctor's review within the same week.

Should I start therapy straight away?

Not before a doctor has reviewed your child. With regression, the first step is a medical assessment by your paediatrician or a neurologist to understand the cause. Therapy is important and follows once the medical picture is clear — Pinnacle's teams work alongside your treating doctor at that stage.

Am I overreacting by worrying about this?

No. Parents are very often the first to notice when a child loses a skill, and your concern is a valid, useful signal. It is always better to have a doctor reassure you than to wait on something time-sensitive.

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