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Starting school is a big milestone. For many parents, it comes with a mix of excitement and a few worries too. Will my child make
Most of us don't spend much time thinking about our voice. It's just there, doing its job every day. We talk to family, answer wor
Lower back pain is something many people experience at some point in life. Sometimes it stays in the back and gradually improves.
Every child communicates in their own way. Some use words early, some rely on gestures for longer, and some need support to make t
If your child avoids messy play, struggles with feeding, has frequent sensory meltdowns, or cannot manage age-expected self-care t
Many children say funny versions of words while learning to talk. A 3-year-old may say wabbit for rabbit or tat for cat, and that
When speech suddenly becomes unclear or words are hard to find, families often ask the same question: is it dysarthria or aphasia?
When a child repeats a word, question, cartoon line, song lyric or phrase they heard earlier, parents may feel confused. Is it a h
A lot of people use the terms panic attack and anxiety attack interchangeably. Honestly, it happens all the time. Someone says, “I
Kindergarten is a busy stage for communication. Children are learning new words, longer sentences, classroom routines, social rule
Children do not always say, “I feel anxious.” Instead, anxiety may appear as stomach aches, sleep trouble, irritability, clingines
Therapy for panic attacks can help people understand sudden waves of fear, calm the body’s alarm response and rebuild confidence i