Global Developmental Delay
When to refer a child with suspected Global Developmental Delay for therapy
Refer at first reasonable suspicion — you do not need a confirmed diagnosis. Once two or more developmental domains lag, or after a failed screen, regression, or persistent parental concern, refer for developmental therapy in parallel with aetiological workup. Therapy should not wait on diagnostics.
When the picture spans more than one domain and a child is missing milestones across the board, the question isn't whether to refer — it's how early.
In short
Refer at first reasonable suspicion — you do not need a confirmed diagnosis to begin. Global Developmental Delay (GDD) is the working term for significant delay (conventionally ≥2 domains) in a child under 5 who is too young for reliable formal cognitive testing. Once two or more domains lag — gross/fine motor, speech-language, cognition, social-emotional or adaptive function — refer in parallel for developmental therapy and aetiological workup. Do not wait for the workup to conclude; early intervention and diagnostics run concurrently.When to refer — a clinical decision frame
- Failed developmental surveillance/screen (RBSK 4 Ds, ASQ, CDC milestone checklist) at any scheduled visit → refer.
- Delay across ≥2 domains on structured screening, or a single severe delay → refer for multidisciplinary assessment.
- Regression or loss of acquired skills → urgent referral and prioritised neurometabolic/neurology evaluation, not therapy-first watchful waiting.
- Parental concern that persists despite a reassuring single visit → low threshold to refer; parental concern has documented predictive value.
- Red flags (no babble/gesture by 12 months, no single words by 16 months, not walking by 18 months, no two-word phrases by 24 months) → refer without delay.
Referral routes the child to the relevant disciplines — speech therapy, occupational and physiotherapy, and early-intervention developmental therapy — while you proceed with hearing/vision assessment and aetiological investigation (genetic, metabolic, neuroimaging as indicated). GDD is a descriptive, often provisional category; many children are later reclassified, which is precisely why therapy should not wait on a definitive label.
The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care — the structured clinician-administered assessment establishes the child's own multi-domain baseline and shapes an individualised therapy plan. Refer with confidence: across 70+ centres in 4 states and 700+ therapists, multidisciplinary teams pick up your referral and begin domain-specific intervention promptly, with progress re-measured against that baseline rather than population norms. Your referred families enter a coordinated pathway, not a waiting list.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 framing of disorders of intellectual development and developmental delay; CDC Learn the Signs. Act Early. milestone surveillance; Indian Academy of Pediatrics developmental guidance; AAP / HealthyChildren.org on early identification; RBSK national screening for the 4 Ds including developmental delay.Next step — Don't wait on a label. Refer the child for a multidisciplinary developmental assessment and begin therapy in parallel with workup.
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
Prioritise urgent referral for any loss of previously acquired skills (regression), a single severe domain delay, or red flags such as not walking by 18 months or no two-word phrases by 24 months.
Try this at home
When counselling families at the point of referral, frame GDD as descriptive and provisional, not fixed — this reduces alarm and supports engagement with early therapy while diagnostics proceed.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · 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
Do I need a confirmed diagnosis before referring for therapy?
No. GDD is a descriptive, often provisional category in under-5s who are too young for reliable cognitive testing. Refer at first reasonable suspicion and run developmental therapy in parallel with aetiological workup — delaying intervention until diagnostics conclude forfeits valuable early-window gains.
How many domains must be affected to justify referral?
Conventionally significant delay in two or more domains (motor, speech-language, cognition, social-emotional, adaptive) defines GDD, but a single severe delay, a failed screen, regression, or persistent parental concern each independently warrant referral.
What should I prioritise when a child shows regression?
Regression — loss of previously acquired skills — is a flag for urgent referral and prioritised neurometabolic and neurology evaluation rather than therapy-first watchful waiting. Refer promptly and escalate the aetiological workup.