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Nursing QUESTION #9273
Question 1
A mother reports her 18-month-old child has not spoken any words yet. The child makes eye contact, points to objects, and plays peek-a-boo. Which is the MOST appropriate next step?
  • Reassure the mother that boys speak late — normal variation
  • Refer for formal speech and language evaluation and hearing test✔️
  • Order MRI brain immediately
  • Begin oral motor exercises at home only
Correct Answer Explanation

Language Development Milestones:

AgeExpected Language
2 monthsCoos, social smile
6 monthsBabbles (ba, da, ma)
9 monthsMama/dada (non-specific)
12 months1–3 meaningful words (mama, dada specific)
18 monthsMinimum 10–20 words; points to body parts
24 months2-word phrases; 50+ words
3 years3-word sentences; strangers understand ~75%

Red flag at 18 months: No single words = speech delay — requires formal evaluation.

Critical distinction:

  • This child maintains eye contact, points, plays peek-a-boo = social development intact → less likely autism
  • Speech delay without social communication deficits suggests: hearing loss, expressive language delay, bilingual exposure, or oral-motor issues

First step: Formal hearing test (audiometry) — hearing loss is the most common correctable cause of speech delay. Concurrent speech-language evaluation.

Reassurance without evaluation at 18 months is inappropriate — early intervention improves outcomes significantly.