Speech and Language Delay
When to Refer a Child with Possible Speech and Language Delay
Refer when language milestones are clearly behind for age, when a parent is worried, or at any red flag — especially loss of words already learned. Always check hearing first. When in doubt, refer: early assessment is low-risk and high-benefit. Only a clinician confirms a diagnosis.
A frontline health worker is often the first to notice a quiet child — and a timely referral changes everything.
In short
Refer a child for specialist assessment when language milestones are clearly behind for age, when a parent or you have a genuine concern, or when there is any red flag such as loss of words already gained. When in doubt, refer — early assessment is low-risk and high-benefit. Most importantly, never wait and watch if a child fails a hearing check or has stopped using words once present.When to refer
Use these age-based thresholds during a Speech and Language Delay check:- By 12 months — no babbling, pointing or gestures
- By 18 months — no single meaningful words; not responding to name
- By 24 months — fewer than ~50 words; not imitating words
- By 30 months — not joining two words together
- By 3 years — speech mostly unintelligible to family; not following simple instructions
- Any age — loss of words or social skills once present, or no response to sound (always refer for hearing testing first)
Refer promptly if a parent is worried even when the child seems near the milestone — parental concern is itself a validated screening signal.
The science, briefly
The WHO classifies these conditions under developmental speech or language disorders (ICD-11 6A01). India's RBSK programme positions frontline workers as the screening backbone, and CDC's Learn the Signs. Act Early. and the Indian Academy of Pediatrics endorse milestone-based referral. Critically, always rule out hearing loss first: many language delays are secondary to undetected hearing problems. Early identification dramatically improves school-readiness and communication outcomes.The Pinnacle way
No diagnosis is ever made from a screening checklist or online form — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, by a qualified clinician. When you refer, the family meets a speech-language pathologist who measures the child against their own AbilityScore® baseline and rules out other causes first. Your early referral is the single most valuable act in this chain.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 (6A01); CDC Learn the Signs. Act Early.; Indian Academy of Pediatrics; RBSK developmental screening; American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org).Next step — When milestones lag or a parent is worried, don't wait. Refer the family for a language assessment at a Pinnacle centre today.
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 urgently if a child loses words or social skills once present, fails a hearing screen, shows no response to sound, or if a parent's worry persists even near a milestone. Parental concern is itself a valid referral trigger.
Try this at home
Coach the family in simple back-and-forth talk: narrate daily routines, pause and wait for the child to respond, and warmly celebrate any sound, word or gesture. Ten minutes of this daily supports language while assessment is arranged.
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
Should I wait and watch if a 2-year-old has very few words?
If a child has fewer than about 50 words by 24 months or isn't imitating words, refer rather than wait. A single late-talking phase can resolve, but a clear lag at this age warrants a specialist assessment — early checking is low-risk and improves outcomes.
What should I rule out before referring for speech therapy?
Always arrange a hearing test first. Many language delays are secondary to undetected hearing loss, so a hearing check should accompany or precede the specialist speech-language referral.
Is parental worry enough reason to refer?
Yes. Parental concern is a validated screening signal. Even if a child seems close to a milestone, a worried parent is good reason to refer for a structured assessment by a qualified clinician.