Hearing Loss Could Develop Speech Problems - Things You Should Know Before it Starts
Hearing loss due to other disorders is prevalent. The thing with hearing loss is that it can cause other problems too. But that would highly depend on when you acquire your hearing loss, and the severity of your hearing loss. For instance, you can develop speech problems when you have hearing loss.
Most people who have speech problems due to hearing loss are those who already had hearing impairment as children even before they were able to speak.
The relationship of hearing and speech is quite simple. Babies learn to speak by imitating what they hear. As an infant\'s hearing mechanism develops, the more he becomes attentive to his environment.
At first they observe what they see, then as their hearing develops further, they learn to localize the sounds that they hear. Meaning when they hear a rattle\'s noise from their right even if they don\'t see the toy itself, they can turn their head towards the same direction where they heard the noise if their curiosity is heightened.
When babies fully learn to localize, then they start to learn to experiment on their vocal mechanism. At first, all they can do is cry. That is the first voiced activity they can do, although involuntarily. As they grow they learn to control their voices, by imitating what they hear in their environment.
At first, they make grunting noises, and then they coo, and then come the point that they babble, and soon after, you can hear them saying their first repeated syllables then the climax comes when they are able to say their first word. All of these are possible because of adults whom they hear in the environment talking to them.
So if you have impaired hearing from the time you were born or acquired hearing impairment before your period of normal speech development, which is from two to five years old; you would definitely have speech problems due to your hearing impairment.
