Communication Skills
Where Communication Skills map in the ICF
In the ICF, Communication Skills in early childhood map to Chapter 3 (Communication) of the Activities and Participation component, with the umbrella code d399. This functioning domain covers receiving and producing messages, conversation and use of communication devices — describing what a child does in real contexts. It is distinct from the body-function substrates (b-codes such as language and voice/speech functions) and is refined for children through the ICF-CY derivation.
When we ask where a young child's communication life sits within the world's shared language of functioning, the ICF gives us a clear home — and a clear caution about its boundaries.
In short
In the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), Communication Skills in early childhood map to Chapter 3 — Communication, with the umbrella code d399 (Communication, unspecified) sitting within the Activities and Participation component. This domain captures both receiving messages (spoken, non-verbal, formal sign) and producing them (speaking, gestures, drawing, early symbolic and conversational exchange), as well as using communication devices and techniques. It is a functioning domain — describing what a child does in real contexts — rather than a diagnosis or a body-structure label.The ICF logic
The ICF organises human functioning into components: Body Functions and Structures, and Activities and Participation, all set against Environmental and Personal factors. Communication is Chapter 3 of Activities and Participation (d310–d399). It spans communicating-receiving (d310–d329), communicating-producing (d330–d349), and conversation and use of communication devices (d350–d369). The code d399 is the unspecified category that anchors the chapter as a whole — useful when describing the broad construct rather than a single discrete act.A critical distinction for early-childhood work: ICF separates the underlying body functions of voice, speech and mental-language operations (the b-codes, e.g. b167 mental functions of language, b310–b340 voice and speech functions) from the activity-and-participation expression of communication (the d-codes). Communication Skills as a functioning construct — what the child accomplishes in everyday settings — therefore maps to the d-domain (d399), while the capacities that enable it are documented under the corresponding b-codes. For children, the ICF-CY (Children & Youth) derivation refines these categories to developmental realities, recognising that communication emerges through pre-verbal exchange, joint attention and play before formal language consolidates.
Why this matters for measurement
Mapping a skill to the correct ICF domain keeps assessment, goal-setting and outcome reporting interoperable across clinicians, educators and researchers. For a researcher or clinician, locating Communication Skills at d399 — distinct from its b-code substrates and from environmental facilitators such as communication aids (e-codes) — supports clean linking of standardised measures to a shared framework, and avoids conflating a body-function impairment with a participation outcome.The Pinnacle way
This is a framework explainer, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from an app or form, through a clinician-administered structured assessment. Our communication and speech therapy pathways align goal-mapping to ICF/ICF-CY domains so that a child's progress is described in a shared, internationally legible language. Explore more across our [knowledge engine](/).Trusted sources
WHO ICF browser entry for the Communication chapter (d399); WHO conceptual material on the ICF and its Children & Youth derivation; ASHA guidance on applying the ICF framework to communication assessment and intervention.Next step — If you are mapping early-childhood communication outcomes to the ICF for clinical or research use, connect with our consortium team to align your measures with Pinnacle's ICF-anchored functioning framework.
What to watch
Whether a measure is describing communication as a participation outcome (d-codes, d399) or as an underlying capacity (b-codes such as b167 language functions or b310–b340 voice and speech functions) — conflating the two undermines ICF-aligned reporting.
Try this at home
When mapping a child's communication goals, separate the activity (what the child does — d399) from the body function that enables it (b-codes) and the supports around them (environmental e-codes); this keeps outcomes interoperable.
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
What ICF code represents Communication Skills?
The umbrella code is d399 (Communication, unspecified), anchoring Chapter 3 — Communication — within the Activities and Participation component of the ICF. It encompasses receiving messages, producing messages, conversation and use of communication devices and techniques.
Is Communication Skills a body-function or activity domain in the ICF?
It is an Activities and Participation domain (d-codes), describing what a child does in everyday contexts. The capacities that enable communication — such as mental functions of language (b167) and voice and speech functions (b310–b340) — are documented separately under Body Functions.
How does the ICF-CY change this for young children?
The ICF Children & Youth derivation refines the communication categories to reflect developmental realities, recognising pre-verbal exchange, joint attention and play-based interaction that precede formal language, while keeping the same Chapter 3 structure.
Does mapping to d399 imply a diagnosis?
No. ICF domains describe functioning, not diagnoses. A clinical assessment and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, through a clinician-administered structured assessment.