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Teenagers > What Causes Stammering - Teenagers
What Causes Stammering?
We don't really know yet. Scientists have been working for years to try and find out whether there is a cause and whether there is a cure. So far all that has been agreed is that the problem is highly complicated.
It probably isn't caused by one single thing, it's more likely that it is the result of a combination of things. And more importantly that the "ingredients" of stammering are probably different for every person who has a stammer. And that the things that help stammering may be slightly different for everyone too.
Different factors may be impacting on the stammering:
Physical/biological factors
- Family history of stammering in blood relatives
- The organisation of the brain for speaking
- The co-ordination of the speech mechanism
These are all probably inter-related.
Speech and language development
- There seems to be some link between the way in which a child develops speech and language which is important. This may either be that a child is quicker or slower than his age group, or that there were some earlier, sometimes quite subtle, difficulties
- There may still be some minor, often unrecognised, difficulties. An example would be in "word retrieval" or "word finding" - here the filing system for vocabulary is not very efficient. It's the 'tip of the tongue' phenomenon! The person knows exactly what they want to say, but the exact word they want to use is momentarily elusive
- The person's instinctive or natural rate of talking also may be influential
Environment - past and present
- Family life
- Rapid pace of life - lots of commitments, activities and demands
- Everyone speaking quickly
- Everyone talking at once
- Expectation to speak up - whenever
Personality - the sort of person you are can make a difference
- High achievers
- Sensitive
- Perfectionist (or self-critical)
- Worriers
Each person will have had a different set of factors that made them vulnerable to stammering in the first place. But perhaps it is now more important to consider what is keeping it going.
The Double Trouble
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Success Stories
James (16) has had therapy on and off since he was four and was at first
reluctant to join the group intensive course for young adults.
However he told his parents afterwards that meeting others with the
same problem had been really helpful and that they were all quite
normal and really good fun!
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