NI ‘early years communication crisis’ highlighted

More children in Northern Ireland waiting for speech and language therapy per head of the population than anywhere else in the UK, ministers told
17th April 2024, 12:11pm

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NI ‘early years communication crisis’ highlighted

https://www.tes.com/magazine/news/early-years/early-years-communication-crisis-highlighted-northern-ireland
Tin can phone Northern Ireland

Northern Ireland is facing an “early years communications crisis” with children waiting too long for speech and language therapy, a new report states.

The Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists (RCSLT) has warned of rising numbers of preschool children with communication difficulties in the region.

The RCSLT is calling for health minister Robin Swann to fund more speech therapists.

The report, We are the Village - Speech, Language and Communication in the Early Years, finds:

  • There has been an 85 per cent increase in children waiting for speech and language therapy appointments, from 2,444 in 2021 to 4,527 in 2023.
  • A rising number of children coming into preschool and primary school sectors with more complex speech and language, requiring longer and more intensive support from speech therapists.
  • There has been a huge workforce shortage, with one in five NHS speech and language therapy posts in Northern Ireland unfilled, and almost a third of posts vacant in some services.

‘Frustrating waits for speech therapy’

Ruth Sedgewick, head of RCSLT NI, said: “Speech and language therapy is not a luxury - it’s about our fundamental ability to communicate.

“There are more children in Northern Ireland waiting for speech and language therapy per head of the population than in any other region of the UK.”

She said that families face “long, frustrating waits for speech therapy at this crucial stage of their children’s development” and had “every right to be concerned”.

Ms Sedgewick added: “Speech and language therapists are doing their level best to support the increasing number of children being referred to them, but they are stretched far beyond capacity.”

The RCSLT is calling on Mr Swann to increase the number of speech and language university places and to introduce alternative routes into the profession, stressing that “the bottom line is we need more speech and language therapists, and we need them soon”.

Ms Sedgewick said: “The minister has said he will commit to increasing the number of speech and language therapy undergraduate places to 40, but this would only be a start and it will take three years before students complete their degree.

“We urge the Department of Health to work much more closely with the Department of Education to improve access to speech, language and communication support for every single child who needs it now.”

She added: “In these important early years, little ones can’t afford to wait six months for an initial speech and language therapy assessment, only to wait for many more months to begin therapy. It’s not good enough and families deserve more.”

‘Very challenging financial situation’

A Department of Health spokesperson said the minister remains committed to implementing the recommendations of the Speech and Language Therapy Workforce Review 2019 to 2029.

In a statement, the department said: “This will require increasing the number of undergraduate speech and language therapy training places commissioned by the department each year by 12, to reach the recommendation of 40 places.

“Any proposed increases will have to be considered in the context of the very challenging financial situation facing the department and the many competing priorities.”

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