Register a Free Account  Sign In
 

Parenting Forums

Pregnancy & Parenting Advice by Madmums bgimage
 
     
 
Bookmarks & Feeds
Madmums RSS Feed
Add to My Yahoo!
Subscribe in NewsGator Online
Add to MyMSN
Add to Google
Add to Windows Live
Add to MyAOL
Subscribe with Bloglines
 
     

     
 
Madmums Sponsored Ads

Click Here to shop at eBay.co.uk
 
     

     
 
Recent Forum Posts
 
     

     
 
Baby Name Lookup
Baby Name Image
For advice on naming your baby during your pregnancy search our comprehensive list of over 22,000 Baby Names with origins and meanings.
Girls Boys All
Top Girls | Top Boys
Get this tool for your own pregnancy website or blog Here.
 
     

     
 
Pregnancy Calculator
This calculator will estimate dates for milestones during your pregnancy, including the earliest you should be able to take a reliable positive pregnancy test. Simply enter the date you started your last menstrual period in the form below and hit Calculate.





 
     

     
 
Madmums Quicktools
 
     

   
Add Thread To: Add this page to Delicious Del.icio.us  Add this page to Digg Digg  Add this page to Google Google  Add this page to Spurl Spurl  Add this page to Blink Blink  Add this page to Furl Furl  Add this page to Simpy Simpy   Add this page to Yahoo! MyWeb Y! MyWeb

Parenting

PDA/Mobile Version PDA/Mobile Version
Forum Start Madmums | Pregnancy and Parenting Forums » Parenting Forums » Parenting

Speech Therapy dilemma Topic: Speech Therapy dilemma

Post ReplyPost New Topic
Forum Jump  
     
 
Author
Message Prev Topic | Next Topic 
offline RIN1983
Manager
Avatar

Manager
Miscarriage and SPD Buddy

Medals:
4000 Posts Club
Medal of Devotion
Fund Raiser
Article Writer 2nd Class
More Awards: 4


Joined: 17 June 2005
National Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom
Posts: 4939
Gender: Female
Posted: 14 September 2007 at 8:11pm | IP Logged Quote RIN1983

Harry has been under a speech therapist for 2 years now.  He started yet another course on Tuesday and it was the same thing again. 

He find's the session boring, babyish and then acts up.  Refuses to part take and becomes the speech therapists nightmare and the whole thing becomes stressful for everyone.

He generally has about 4 sessions a year, 6 week long sessions followed by months on a waiting list.  He is now on his 5th speech therapist and i really dont think we are going to get anywhere with this one.

What I'm trying to say is, is it worth it?  I dont really think he gets much from the sessions, I've explained his current situation to each and everyone of the therapists, told them what he likes, dislikes how to keep his attention etc.. but it seems to fall on deaf ears.

The 45mins seem to be a waste of everybodys time.  I dont think we can afford private sessions and wouldn't know where to begin to look for them.

I'm on a bit of a downer with anything harry related recently as everything I do to try and help him seems doomed to fail.

I'm afraid that if i tell the speech therapist the sessions are pointless as he wont get much from them, then it'll look bad on me and will go against us getting the help we need to find out whats wrong with him. That and the fact that if his speech doesnt improve (which it has recently anyway) then it'll be all my fault

ah I'm so confused

Back to Top Printable version View RIN1983's Profile Search for other posts by RIN1983 View RIN1983 Ebay Auctions
 
 
offline Angelica72
Looney Tune
Avatar

Looney Tune
Medals:
1000 Posts Club
Subscriber
Medal of Devotion
Invited a Friend
More Awards: 2


Joined: 24 April 2007
National Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom
Posts: 1927
Gender: Female
Posted: 14 September 2007 at 8:24pm | IP Logged Quote Angelica72

Sorry - again I have no experience with this, but reading your post it occurred to me - would it make any difference if Harry saw the same speech therapist, or would that not matter? It must be tiring to have to go through everything each time you see someone different. I would have thought that the speech therapists should be used to dealing with all kinds of different personalities in the children they work with - you certainly shouldn't be coming away from your appointments feeling like wee Harry was their 'nightmare'. Don't feel that this is your fault. You should be getting much more help with finding out what Harry needs from these professionals than you are.

I hope you get some answers soon, and then the help that Harry needs. Good Luck.

xxx

Back to Top Printable version View Angelica72's Profile Search for other posts by Angelica72
 
offline zanynut
Insane
Avatar

Insane
SPD Buddy

Medals:
1000 Posts Club
Community Award
Medal of Devotion
Medal of Compassion
More Awards: 2


Joined: 11 September 2007
National Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom
Posts: 2742
Gender: Female
Posted: 14 September 2007 at 8:28pm | IP Logged Quote zanynut

Hi hun,

I have had a son go though speach therapy, and i had a similar problem.

Half of the trouble is its he's trying to assert his own powers and authority, speak to your hv and see what she says.... also ask if there is a play therapist that does speach too as that will make it more fun.

If not suggest to the speach therapist that you'd like to keep coming but would like to take a 6mth break to a year before your next appointment, and ask for some exercises to do at home which should just make the appointments a check up sort of thing.

It might be worth a try.

Back to Top Printable version View zanynut's Profile Search for other posts by zanynut View zanynut Ebay Auctions
 
offline 3smallboys
Looney Tune


Looney Tune
Medals:
Medal of Devotion
Quality Poster
Article Writer 5th Class
Secret Santa 2006


Joined: 04 October 2006
National Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom
Posts: 881
Gender: Female
Posted: 14 September 2007 at 8:35pm | IP Logged Quote 3smallboys

Hi Rin

I'm sorry to hear your having such problems. Noah had one speech therapist who was useless, but fortunately for us she left and he got a new one who was much better. When he needed some more and was on a massive waiting list, I looked into private therapists, as I was really worried about him starting school. It is very expensive (typically £50 an hour!) and fortunately, I bugged so many people at our primary care trust, that he eventually got seen sooner on the NHS. However, I did got the information from this website:

http://www.helpwithtalking.com/

which lists private therapists, and I phoned a couple, and actualy got some really good advice, just from talking on the phone. If you find one in your area, it might be worth giving them a call, pretend that you're thinking of getting some private therapy and want to talk it through properly first, and just see what they can say. It may be that they can give you some ideas that you can try yourself at home. I often found with Noah that he would respond better to me doing the games with him at home than he had to the therapist.

What about the school? Can they help you at all? My own experience was that there was little to be gained from going to the sessions when Noah wasn't going to co-operate, as if they're stressed about it, they won't join in. It is a lot of money to go private, but if you get someone good, you may only need one session to get enough information to be able to do more yourself at home.

Failing that, have you been to your GP again? Is Harrison under any kind of a specialist for his adhd or anything? My experiences with the NHS have made me realise that the more people you badger, and the more you badger them, the more help you get.

Good luck Rin xxx

Back to Top Printable version View 3smallboys's Profile Search for other posts by 3smallboys
 
offline Sunny
Barmy
Avatar

Barmy
Medals:
Medal of Devotion
Quality Poster


Joined: 18 April 2007
National Flag of Canada Canada
Posts: 290
Gender: Female
Posted: 15 September 2007 at 4:38am | IP Logged Quote Sunny

Hi Rin,

Sorry you are having a hard time.

I know exactly how you feel,my 6 year old has a speech and language delay )although thanks to many sessions...he is now clear and coherent)

Like you I have been to many sessions, I really think they are necessary. I found that I had to always be my sons advocate and communicate the fact things needed stirred up. Have you discussed group sessions with the therapist? My son loved these as there were other children there to have a laugh with.

In the group sessions they would cut out stories and sequence them and then tell the story, or the therapist would read a book and then they would act it out.

I know how hard it is hun...and I know how it can get you down....I know I still feel why me and it is not fair. BUT it is us and you will cope because you are a fab lovin mother.

Please please please do not pull him out of therapy....My expereiece with the NHS is to never refuse anything as thy will turn it around on you. I know there is a community speech therapy liasing officer who determines wating list etc...try and talk to her about what is happening.

My advice to you is get on the phone and really start getting his name out. I was the communities worst nightmare as I would call constantly and ask for updates on the situation. Speak to your GP, speak to liaising officer, speak the the educational psychologist, speak to the teacher.

Take Care, I have been there so if you ever need any help...I am here

Back to Top Printable version View Sunny's Profile Search for other posts by Sunny
 
offline Lynie
Manager
Avatar

Manager
Education and Breastfeeding Buddy

Medals:
3000 Posts Club
Community Award
Medal of Devotion
Unique Contributer
More Awards: 7


Joined: 17 June 2005
National Flag of United Kingdom United Kingdom
Posts: 3708
Gender: Female
Posted: 15 September 2007 at 7:29am | IP Logged Quote Lynie

I've been really frustrated with the speech therapy service here.  We refer, along with the parent's consent of course, any children we have in our class who need speech therapy.  But the NHS service we receive in school here is patchy and the sessions so infrequent we really question the value of them too.  It would be brilliant to have a frequent service for the children who need it, but sometimes you find there's only 1 therapist for loads of schools so they need to spread themselves so thinly.

He should be getting complementary sessions with the school speech therapist too, although they might be on an ad-hoc basis as I've described.  Have they told you about it?  It sounds like your recent problems are due to the  therapist rather than the therapy, I hope you can get seen by another one and get a better service. 
  
Back to Top Printable version View Lynie's Profile Search for other posts by Lynie View Lynie Ebay Auctions
 
 
     
Forum Jump  

If you wish to post a reply to this topic you must first login
If you are not already registered you must first register

  Post ReplyPost New Topic

     
 
 
Printable version Printable version
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot create polls in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum