Children with speech issues risk poor mental health, charity warns
The charity says almost half (45%) of all young people referred to mental health services are also dealing with serious speech and language challenges.
That can include difficulties with learning new words, understanding non-verbal cues or stammering during speech.
The government says it will "ensure thousands more children receive the help they need to overcome challenges with communication" through its Plan for Change.
A record two million children in the UK are experiencing issues with their speech and language, according to Speech and Language UK.
And one in five children and young people aged eight to 25 experienced a mental health problem in 2023, according to the NHS.
Speech and Language UK's chief executive Jane Harris says children who struggle with talking and understanding words are more likely to develop poor mental health.
"Everyone uses words to identify how they're feeling. If you're struggling with language, you can't say to yourself, 'I'm sad, I'm angry.' You can't categorise how you're feeling," she says.
"So if we've got more and more children who are struggling with language, we're going to end up with more and more children with mental health problems."
The charity wants better training in speech and language for teachers and school support staff, as well as mental health professionals, and better information sharing between schools and mental health teams to spot language issues in children at an early age.
In a joint report with the Centre for Mental Health, the authors call for schools and mental health teams to move away from a reliance on talking-based therapies, adding that solutions like art therapy could sometimes be more appropriate.
23 language and literacy tips to support your child
How can you talk with your child about mental health?
How to become a speech and language therapist: Anne's story
The government has committed to providing access to mental health support in every secondary school in England by 2030. Speech and Language UK says it's important those mental health teams in schools have mandatory training in spotting speech and language issues too.
"They need to spot when a child has both communication and mental health issues, but also they need to make sure that whatever mental health support they're giving them is actually adapted and is suitable for that child."
Speech and language is the most common form of support for children in England with special educational needs, according to the latest data.
For around one million young people across the UK, speech and language challenges can last a lifetime, due to conditions like cerebral palsy, autism, or hearing impairments. An estimated 800,000 of those have developmental language disorder, known as DLD, a condition where people have long-term challenges talking or understanding words.
Siouxsie, 19, has lived with DLD since she was a young child and finds it hard to put her ideas into words. She also has selective mutism, driven by anxiety.
She says she didn't get the right support as a child, which has impacted her ability to communicate as an adult.
"All my mental health struggles go completely hand-in-hand with my severe DLD and being misunderstood and feeling invisible. I find everything so hard as I cannot speak up," Siouxsie says, speaking to us over Zoom alongside her mum Rachel, after we sent her some of our question areas in advance.
"To do things in life you have to continuously listen, understand and process what is being said. For someone like me this is just completely exhausting.
"I get really anxious in restaurants, in cafes, shops, in any group situation, even at the hairdressers, so I don't go."
She says she has found a creative outlet in the form of dance, and wants to study dance, mime and physical theatre, but is struggling to find a course she can access.
Siouxsie has been receiving support from Speech and Language UK with her communication and says she is still working with a speech and language therapist.
The BBC have approached Siouxsie's mainstream primary and secondary schools for a response to her claim that she was not well-supported as a child.
Responding to the report, a Department for Education spokesperson said: "Our Nuffield Early Language Intervention programme is providing support with speech and language development for tens of thousands of children in reception year, and we are going further, faster by working with NHS England to embed specialist support for children struggling with communication in early years and primary school settings – preventing issues from escalating.
"We're also taking action to cut NHS waiting lists, reform the Send system to prioritise early intervention and expand our mental health support teams to an additional 900,000 pupils by April 2026 so every child can achieve and thrive."
How did the pandemic impact babies starting school as children now?
Child speech delays increase following lockdowns
Lockdowns hurt child speech and language skills
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
25 minutes ago
- Yahoo
‘My cancer symptoms were mistaken for signs of menopause – now I'm unable to walk'
A woman has been left unable to walk after her spinal cancer symptoms were mistaken for signs of the menopause and a gardening injury. Karen Davey, 54, from Cornwall, began experiencing hot flushes, fatigue, and loss of appetite in early 2024, but she assumed these were menopause symptoms. But by March 2024, she developed pain in her kidneys and went to visit her GP. However, she was told the back pain was due to gardening, despite having only done 20 minutes of this. Over the next two months, her symptoms worsened and she stopped eating properly, lost weight, and developed a temperature, later losing all sensation in her legs, as well as bladder and bowel function. After being taken to the hospital and admitted for two weeks, she was given the devastating news that she had stage four non-Hodgkin lymphoma in her kidneys, and a tumour wrapped around her spinal cord. After one round of radiotherapy and further chemotherapy, she is now in remission. However, she has been left unable to walk. The 'life-changing' impacts of the cancer have meant she has to reduce her working hours to four a week, while her husband has given up work to be a full-time carer. Ms Davey told the Spinal Injuries Association she felt her symptoms were 'dismissed' by her GP and continued to be dismissed until she was admitted to hospital. She said: 'I'd gone from somebody who was quite active before. I'd do a lot of hiking across the moors, I used to go cold-water swimming all year round. One of the last things I did before I got ill was an abseil off a 120-foot viaduct. 'This isn't what I'm supposed to be doing at this time of life. I've not yet been able to get back to driving or anything like that. I'm completely reliant on my husband; it's messed up my social life, just going out to meet friends or going swimming or popping into town to look around the shops. Emotionally, it's just completely messed me up.' Ms Davey said she wanted to spread awareness of her situation and help others who might be experiencing similar symptoms. She said, 'I had no idea that hot flushes would lead to all this. The symptoms you've got aren't always menopause symptoms, and we need to be more mindful of that. 'I just get annoyed that it was attributed to menopause and doing gardening when it needed looking into a bit more. I didn't know anything about spinal cord injury and when my toes started going tingly, it didn't occur to me that that's what it was. There's not enough information.' Spinal Injuries Association supports people living with spinal cord injuries. Dharshana Sridhar, campaigns manager at the association, said: 'Karen's story is a powerful reminder that women's health symptoms should never be dismissed or explained away without proper investigation. 'Too often, women with spinal cord injuries face delays in diagnosis and unnecessary barriers to equitable care, leaving them to cope with life-changing consequences that could have been prevented. Across the board, women's concerns are frequently overlooked and when disability or other intersecting factors are involved, the barriers to timely diagnosis and treatment become even greater. Through our women's health campaign, we're calling for better awareness, earlier diagnosis, and accessible healthcare for every woman, no matter her disability."


CNN
27 minutes ago
- CNN
Texas says measles outbreak is over
The measles outbreak centered in West Texas – one of the largest and deadliest in centuries – has ended, state health officials announced on Monday. No new cases have been reported in the counties that had previously shown evidence of ongoing transmission in more than 42 days, according to the announcement. An outbreak is considered to be over after this amount of time because it suggests that there two incubation periods have passed – the time it would take to get sick after an exposure – without any transmission. Texas has confirmed at least 762 cases of measles associated with the outbreak since late January, including nearly 100 hospitalizations. More than two-thirds of the cases were in children, and two school-aged children from Texas died – the first deaths from measles in the United States since 2015. 'I want to highlight the tireless work of the public health professionals across the state who contributed to the containment of one of the most contagious viruses. We arrived at this point through a comprehensive outbreak response that included testing, vaccination, disease monitoring and educating the public about measles through awareness campaigns,' Dr. Jennifer Shuford, commissioner of the Texas Department of State Health Services said in a statement. 'I also want to recognize the many health care professionals who identified and treated cases of a virus that most providers had never seen in person before this outbreak.' Cases linked to the outbreak in Texas have also been reported in New Mexico – where one person died – as well as Oklahoma and possibly Kansas. New Mexico reported three new cases on Thursday, bringing the state's total up to 100 cases this year, but it was not immediately clear if these cases were linked to the broader outbreak. Overall, the US has reported more than 1,350 measles cases this year – more than there have been in more than three decades – a record number since measles was declared eliminated in the country in 2000. Outbreak cases in Texas account for more than half of the cases nationwide. Most outbreak-related cases in Texas were in and around Gaines County, where the measles vaccination rate among kindergartners is one of the lowest in the state. In Texas and nationwide, the vast majority of measles cases have been in people who are unvaccinated; only about 8% of cases this year have been in people who were known to have at least one dose of the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine, according to data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Texas health officials say that 'the end of this outbreak does not mean the threat of measles is over.' 'Since there are ongoing outbreaks of measles in North America and around the world, it is likely that there will be additional cases of measles this year in Texas,' according to an announcement sent on Monday. 'Health care providers should continue to be vigilant and test for measles if their patient has symptoms compatible with the virus.' At least 41 states have reported measles cases this year, and vaccination coverage among kindergartners dipped again last school year. For the 2024-25 school year, a record share of incoming kindergartners had an exemption for a required vaccine, most often for personal or religious reasons, CDC data shows.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
ONWARD Medical Receives FDA IDE Approval to Initiate the Empower BP Pivotal Study with the ARC-IM System
THIS PRESS RELEASE CONTAINS INSIDE INFORMATION WITHIN THE MEANING OF ARTICLE 7(1) OF THE EUROPEAN MARKET ABUSE REGULATION (596/2014) The investigational device exemption (IDE) allows initiation of a global pivotal study designed to assess the safety and efficacy of the ARCIM System®, an implantable neurostimulation technology developed to address blood pressure instability after spinal cord injury (SCI). Managing blood pressure instability is a major unmet need after SCI, with a significant impact on cardiovascular health and quality of life. Approximately 20 leading neurorehabilitation and neurosurgical research centers across the US, Canada and Europe are expected to participate. EINDHOVEN, The Netherlands, Aug. 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- ONWARD Medical N.V. (Euronext: ONWD and US ADR: ONWRY), the leading neurotechnology company pioneering therapies to restore movement, function, and independence in people with spinal cord injury and other movement disabilities, today announces that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved an investigational device exemption for the ARC-IM System. With this approval, the Company can initiate the Empower BP pivotal study to assess the safety and efficacy of its implantable spinal stimulation system to address blood pressure instability after SCI. Empower BP is the Company's second global pivotal study, and the first to evaluate the implantable ARC-IM System. The randomized, double-blinded, sham-controlled study is expected to involve approximately 20 leading neurorehabilitation and neurosurgical research centers across the US, Canada and Europe, with first patient enrollment anticipated before the end of the year. The study will target participants with injuries at spinal cord levels C2-T6, injury severities of AIS A-D, and blood pressure instability characterized by chronic orthostatic hypotension (OH) and episodes of autonomic dysreflexia (AD). 'This is an important milestone for ONWARD and the SCI community,' said Dave Marver, CEO of ONWARD. 'Our ARC-IM System is designed to address several unmet needs, including blood pressure instability which is a major recovery target after spinal cord injury. With this IDE approval, we continue to advance our innovation pipeline and inspire realistic hope in restoring autonomic functions and independence after SCI and other movement disabilities.' Over 50% of people with SCI experience blood pressure instability, affecting nearly 350,000 people in the US and Europe.1 Blood pressure instability and persistent low blood pressure can threaten neurological recovery and negatively impact cardiovascular health and quality of life. The most frequent symptoms include dizziness, lightheadedness, blurred vision and fatigue.2 'Blood pressure instability, especially chronic low blood pressure, is one of the most hidden and unrecognized functional complications of spinal cord injury,' explains Dr. James Guest, neurosurgeon and Professor of Neurological Surgery at the University of Miami. 'It leaves people feeling unwell and can significantly impact their overall quality of life. Blood pressure instability also increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, making addressing this unmet need critical for improving the long-term outcomes of SCI.' The ONWARD ARC-IM System is an implanted neuromodulation platform designed to deliver targeted and personalized spinal cord stimulation. It is the first neuroprosthetic system designed to manage blood pressure instability in people with SCI. It comprises the implanted ONWARD Neurostimulator (IPG) and the ARC-IM Thoracic Lead. The ARC-IM Thoracic Lead is optimized for surgical placement in a specific region of the thoracic spinal cord, called the 'Hemodynamic Hotspot'. The location was first discovered by the Company's research partners at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL), Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV), and the University of Calgary in a study published in Nature in January 2021.3 In December 2022, the Company announced positive top-line interim clinical results from its feasibility studies showing improved blood pressure regulation and improved hemodynamic stability after SCI. In addition to immediate and sustained improved blood pressure levels, participants taking anti-hypotension drugs prior to the study significantly reduced or discontinued their medication. Participants also reported improved general well-being and a reduction in orthostatic hypotension, including reduced dizziness and increased energy. Detailed interim results from these studies are expected to be published later this year. Managing blood pressure instability is among the major unmet needs for which the FDA has awarded the Company one of its 10 Breakthrough Device Designations. This award is reserved for novel, cutting-edge therapies addressing unmet needs and provides potential regulatory and reimbursement benefits. To stay informed about ONWARD's research studies, technologies, and the availability of therapies in your area, please complete this webform. About ONWARD Medical ONWARD Medical is the leading neurotechnology company pioneering therapies to restore movement, function, and independence in people with spinal cord injuries, and other movement disabilities. Building on over a decade of scientific discovery, preclinical research, and clinical studies conducted at leading hospitals, rehabilitation clinics, and neuroscience laboratories, the Company developed ARC Therapy. It has subsequently been awarded 10 Breakthrough Device designations from the FDA. The Company's ARC-EX® System is cleared for commercial sale in the US. The Company is also developing an investigational implantable system called ARC-IM, which can be paired with a brain-computer interface (BCI) to restore thought-driven movement. Headquartered in the Netherlands, the Company has a Science and Engineering Center in Switzerland and a US office in Boston, Massachusetts. The Company is listed on Euronext Paris, Brussels, and Amsterdam (ticker: ONWD) and its US ADRs can be traded on OTCQX (ticker: ONWRY). For more information, please visit For Media Inquiries: Sébastien Cros, VP Communications media@ For Investor Inquiries: investors@ Notes and references: 1. Katzelnick CG et al. Blood Pressure Instability in Persons With SCI: Evidence From a 30-Day Home Monitoring Observation. Am J Hypertens. 2019 Sep 24;32(10):938-944 2. Carlozzi, N. E. et al. Impact of blood pressure dysregulation on health-related quality of life in persons with spinal cord injury: development of a conceptual model. Arch. Phys. Med. Rehabil. 94, 1721–1730 (2013) 3. Squair, J.W. et al. Neuroprosthetic baroreflex controls haemodynamics after spinal cord injury. Nature 590, 308–314 (2021) Forward-Looking Statements Certain statements, beliefs, and opinions in this press release are forward-looking, which reflect the Company's or, as appropriate, the Company directors' current expectations and projections about future events. By their nature, forward-looking statements involve several risks, uncertainties, and assumptions that could cause actual results or events to differ materially from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. These risks, uncertainties, and assumptions could adversely affect the outcome and financial effects of the plans and events described herein. A multitude of factors including, but not limited to, delays in regulatory approvals, changes in demand, competition, and technology, can cause actual events, performance, or results to differ significantly from any anticipated development. Forward-looking statements contained in this press release regarding past trends or activities should not be taken as a representation that such trends or activities will continue in the future. As a result, the Company expressly disclaims any obligation or undertaking to release any update or revisions to any forward-looking statements in this press release as a result of any change in expectations or any change in events, conditions, assumptions, or circumstances on which these forward-looking statements are based. Neither the Company nor its advisers or representatives nor any of its subsidiary undertakings or any such person's officers or employees guarantees that the assumptions underlying such forward-looking statements are free from errors nor does either accept any responsibility for the future accuracy of the forward-looking statements contained in this press release or the actual occurrence of the forecasted developments. You should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date of this press release.