⏳ Developmental Delay in Children – Early Signs, Causes, Screening & What Parents Should Do

Not every child develops at the same pace. Some talk late, some walk late, some are shy or take longer to learn daily activities. That is normal variation.

But when a child consistently lags behind in achieving key milestones — like sitting, walking, talking, learning, or interacting — it may indicate a developmental delay.

Developmental delay ≠ disability.
It simply means the child is developing slower than expected — and with early intervention, many children catch up completely.

🌱 What Is Developmental Delay?

Developmental delay means a child is behind in one or more of these areas:

Domain What It Includes
Gross motor Rolling, sitting, standing, walking, running
Fine motor Holding objects, scribbling, using spoon, buttoning
Speech & language Babbling, first words, understanding instructions
Cognitive Thinking, problem solving, recognizing shapes, colours
Social & emotional Eye contact, smiling, sharing, pretend play, responding to name
Adaptive skills Feeding self, toilet training, brushing teeth, dressing

If a child is delayed in 2 or more areas → Global Developmental Delay (GDD)

📌 When Should Parents Be Concerned? (Milestone Checklist)

Age Expected Milestone If Not Present → Red Flag
6 months Social smile, responds to sounds No eye contact, no smile
9 months Sits with support Still floppy or stiff
12 months Stands with help, says “mama/dada” No babbling or standing
18 months Walks alone, 10–20 words No walking or speech
2 years 2-word sentences, points to objects No meaningful words
3 years Plays with others, clear speech Only babbling, no interest in children
4 years Follows instructions, answers questions Speech unclear, poor eye contact

🧠 Causes of Developmental Delays

Category Examples
Genetic / Chromosomal Down syndrome, Fragile X
Birth-Related Premature birth, low birth weight, lack of oxygen
Environmental Malnutrition, screen addiction, lack of stimulation
Neurological Cerebral palsy, seizures
Metabolic / Endocrine Hypothyroidism, inborn metabolic disorders
Sensory Issues Hearing loss, vision impairment
Autism / ADHD / GDD Neurodevelopmental disorders
Unknown (Idiopathic) No clear cause in many cases

🩺 How Do We Diagnose Developmental Delay?

A proper evaluation includes:

✔ Detailed birth + developmental history
✔ Growth charts (height, weight, head circumference)
✔ Developmental screening tools:

  • Denver Developmental Screening Test (DDST)

  • Trivandrum Developmental Screening Chart (TDSC)

  • ASQ (Ages & Stages Questionnaire)
    ✔ Tests for hearing, vision, thyroid, anemia, genetic abnormalities
    ✔ Autism screening (M-CHAT, ISAA) if social delay present

🛠️ Treatment & Early Intervention – What Helps Most

There is no single medicine that treats developmental delay — but therapy helps the brain learn through repetition and support.

Therapy Purpose
Physiotherapy Helps motor delay (walking, balance, muscle tone)
Occupational Therapy Improves fine motor skills, sensory issues
Speech Therapy Speech delay, understanding, social communication
Special Education / Early Intervention Centres Pre-academic learning & cognitive skills
Parent Training Teaches how to stimulate child at home
Nutritional correction Protein, iron, vitamin D, omega-3 supplements

Earlier the therapy begins (before age 3–5), faster and better the recovery.

What Parents Can Do at Home

✔ Talk, sing, read aloud daily
✔ No screens (mobile/TV) under age 2
✔ Encourage play with toys, blocks, puzzles—not phones
✔ Use names, gestures, expressions while talking
✔ Praise small achievements, avoid comparison & scolding
✔ Encourage independence — feeding, dressing, toilet training
✔ Regular follow-ups with developmental pediatrician/psychiatrist

What to Avoid

✘ “Wait, he will talk when he wants to” (delay = lost time)
✘ Excessive mobile phone or YouTube “rhymes learning”
✘ Shaming the child (“lazy,” “slow,” “useless”)
✘ Overprotection or doing everything for the child
✘ Visiting astrologers or stopping treatment due to relatives’ comments
✘ Seeing therapy as failure — it is an investment in the child’s future

🌟 Can Developmental Delay Improve?

Yes, absolutely — if detected early and treated consistently.

Many children catch up fully and go to regular schools.
Some may need long-term support — but progress is always possible with the right guidance.

👨‍⚕️ About the Author

Dr. Srinivas Rajkumar T
MD (AIIMS, New Delhi), DNB Psychiatry
Consultant Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist
Mind & Memory Clinic – Apollo Clinic (Opp. Phoenix MarketCity)
Velachery, Chennai – 600042
📞 +91-8595155808 | 🌐 www.srinivasaiims.com

Specialized in Developmental Delay, Autism, Speech Delay, ADHD, Learning Difficulties and Early Intervention Planning.

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