X

Consumer Privacy Notice

Visit the St. Elizabeth Healthcare Privacy Policy and St. Elizabeth Physician's Privacy Policy for details regarding the categories of personal information collected through St. Elizabeth website properties and the organizational purpose(s) for which the information will be used to improve your digital consumer/patient experience. We do not sell or rent personally-identifying information collected.

Stuttering

Updated: 2024-03-02


Description

Stuttering is a speech disorder that disrupts the normal flow of speech.

Overview

People who stutter know what they want to say, but they have a hard time saying it. Stuttering is common in young children as a usual part of learning to speak. It often gets better on its own. But it can continue into the adult years.

Symptoms

Symptoms include finding it hard to start a word or sentence. Those who stutter stretch or repeat words, or add words or pauses in a word. They can be tense, or they may move their face or upper body to produce a word. They also may be anxious about talking and have trouble communicating.

Treatment

Seek treatment if stuttering lasts more than six months, becomes more frequent or continues as a child ages. Also seek treatment if stuttering affects communication, causes anxiety or starts as an adult. A speech-language pathologist can teach skills to help speech flow and improve communication.