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Developmental Trauma

When to refer a child with possible Developmental Trauma

Refer whenever a child shows a persistent change in relating, feeling or developing — especially after a known adversity — or any safety concern. You needn't be certain; recognising the pattern and routing it onward is your role. When in doubt, refer early.

When to refer a child with possible Developmental Trauma
When to refer a child with possible Developmental Trauma — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

A frontline worker's instinct that 'something is off' with a child is one of the most powerful early signals in our whole system — here is how to act on it.

In short

Refer a child with possible Developmental Trauma to a specialist whenever you see a persistent change in how the child relates, feels or develops that doesn't settle with reassurance and follow-up. You do not need to be certain — recognising the pattern and routing it onward is exactly your role. When in doubt, refer; early support changes outcomes.

What to watch — refer when you see

  • A known adversity — neglect, violence at home, separation from a caregiver, prolonged hospitalisation — plus any change in the child.
  • Relationship signals — extreme clinginess or withdrawal, no comfort-seeking, fear of a caregiver, or being indiscriminately friendly with strangers.
  • Regulation signals — frequent inconsolable distress, frozen stillness, sleep or feeding disruption, or developmental skills slipping backwards.
  • Red-flag safety concerns — signs of ongoing abuse or a child not safe at home: escalate urgently, not routinely.

One hard week after a stressful event can be normal. A pattern lasting weeks, or any safety concern, is your cue to refer.

The science, briefly

Early adversity affects the developing stress response and the caregiver–child bond, which is why trauma can look like a developmental or behavioural delay. WHO's nurturing-care framework and AAP guidance both stress that frontline screening plus timely specialist referral — not waiting — gives children the best chance to recover.

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 form or a single visit. Our structured clinician assessment measures the child against their own baseline, and our child & family therapy team supports both child and caregiver together.

Trusted sources

WHO nurturing-care framework; AAP guidance on childhood adversity and trauma-informed care; NIMHANS child mental-health resources.

Next step — Trust the instinct that brought you here. Refer this child for an assessment with a Pinnacle specialist team.

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

Refer sooner if the child shows withdrawal, no comfort-seeking, fear of a caregiver, developmental skills slipping backwards, or any sign they are not safe at home — escalate safety concerns urgently rather than routinely.

Try this at home

When you meet the family, note one concrete observation in plain words — 'doesn't settle when picked up', 'stopped using words she had' — and pass it on with the referral. A specific frontline observation speeds the right help.

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 to be sure it is trauma before I refer?

No. Your job is to notice a persistent change or a safety concern and route the child onward. Confirming the cause is the specialist's work — early referral is always better than waiting for certainty.

What if it's just a passing reaction to stress?

A brief reaction after a stressful event is common and often settles. The flag is a pattern that lasts weeks, skills slipping backwards, or any sign the child is unsafe — those warrant referral.

What should I include when I refer?

A plain, concrete observation helps most: what you saw, when it started, and any known adversity at home. Specific notes help the specialist act faster.

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