Deafness is one of the most common occurrences affecting newborns; an average of three per every thousand are born with a significant hearing loss each year. Recognizing hearing loss early in a baby's life is essential for language development. Research shows that children with hearing loss who are fitted early with hearing devices have an easier time learning to listen and speak and eventually have an easier time learning to read and write.
Parents should ensure that newborns are screened for hearing loss before leaving the hospital and periodically throughout a child's infancy and childhood. Parents should also become familiar with hearing and language milestones so that they, too, can help to identify hearing loss early.
As a child grows, he or she will reach certain milestones in language development. Failure to reach these milestones may mean a child has a hearing loss or other language or developmental problems. Below is a guide to gauge a baby's language and hearing development as he or she grows.
Newborn
Cries
Startles to loud, sudden sounds
2 to 3 Months
Laughs
Forms sounds in the back of the mouth ("goo")
Recognizes familiar voices
4 to 6 Months
Turns head toward sounds
Makes non-speech sounds (squealing, yells, growls)
Engages in vocal play
6 to 12 Months
Babbles (repeats syllables two or more times in sequence: "ma-ma-ma")
Uses facial expressions, eye gaze, vocalization and gestures to communicate
12 Months
Recognizes his or her name
Understands "No"
Understands simple instructions and gives toy on request
12 to 18 Months
Strings sounds together with adult-like speech patterns
Says first words
18 Months
Understands 50 words
Uses up to 20 words, typically in one-word sentences
18 to 36 Months
Experiences rapid speech development
36 Months
Understands up to 3,600 words
Uses up to 900 words, with an average of 3 to 4 words per sentence
Begins to obey instructions with prepositional phrases ("put the doll in the carriage")
Can tell a story
Can sing songs
Parents who have any concern about a baby's hearing development should contact their child's healthcare professional. Parents of newly-identified deaf and hard-of-hearing infants and toddlers can also receive free parent resources, including a parent information kit and a new film called Dreams Made Real, by calling Oral Deaf Education at 1-877-ORALDEAF or visiting www.oraldeafed.org.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Pediatrics for Parents, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group