What is Down Syndrome?

Down Syndrome is a genetic disorder caused by the addition of an extra chromosome. People with Down Syndrome have 47 chromosomes in their cells instead of 46. The duplicate chromosome is chromosome 21, which is why Down Syndrome is also referred to as Trisomy 21. Down Syndrome occurs at conception and can affect both genders, people from all ethnic and social groups and to parents of all ages.

What are the common features of Down Syndrome?

People with Down Syndrome present with the following features:

Physical features:

  • Flattened nose
  • Small teeth
  • Stunted growth
  • Short neck
  • Shortened hands
  • Low set and rounded ears
  • Shortened extremities
  • Atypical fingerprints
  • Flexible ligaments
  • Smaller genitalia
  • Separation of the abdominal muscles

Developmental features:

  • Intellectual disability
  • Learning difficulties
  • Developmental delay
  • Speech and communication difficulties
  • Difficulty with coordination
  • Difficulty with fine and gross motor skills

Common difficulties often (but not always) experienced by the child with Down Syndrome:

  • Difficulty understanding the conventions of social interactions.
  • Poor articulation of sounds.
  • Difficulties with reading and writing.
  • Immature play skills/interests.
  • Resistance to change, very rigid in routine.
  • Can be impulsive or aggressive.
  • Difficulties understanding and using non-verbal communication.
  • Difficulties understanding instructions, questions or jokes.
  • Difficulties with fine and gross motor skills.
  • Difficulty accessing the school curriculum.

Management strategies that support the child with Down Syndrome (at preschool, school and/or home):

  • Set up an individualised plan with parents/carers that has small achievable goals to help develop the child’s skills.
  • Develop social stories to improve appropriate behaviour in social situations.
  • Positive encouragement
  • Provide opportunities to succeed by simplifying activities.
  • Teach new skills in a step by step manner and keep the environment as predictable as possible during teaching.
  • Introduce new skills or environments on an individual basis before introducing peers.
  • Use simple language and instructions.
  • Provide visual as well as verbal cues.
  • Provide extra time to complete tasks.
  • Recognise and reinforce the child’s strengths.
  • Appropriate set up for school desk.
  • Set realistic and achievable goals for all task performance and completion.
  • Make participation, not competition, the goal.
  • Liaison between health professionals and educational staff to provide information to be incorporated into an education plan and/or implementing ideas/suggestions/activities to help improve the child’s ability to access to the curriculum.

Occupational Therapy approaches and activities that can support the child with Down Syndrome and/or their carers include:

  • Expand abilities: Developing a broad range of skill areas.
  • Social stories: Providing ideas and education around social story development.
  • School transition: Advocating and professionally supporting the transition to school and liaising with teachers (as required).
  • Visual cues can be used to support routine and to introduce new activities, or a change in tasks.
  • Gross and fine motor skills: Determining the current age level of a child’s gross and fine motor abilities.
  • Devise goals: Setting functional and achievable goals in collaboration with the child, parents and teachers so that therapy has a common focus beneficial to everyone involved.
  • Educating parents, carers, teachers and others involved in the child’s care about Down Syndrome and the age appropriate skills a child should be demonstrating.
  • Management strategies: Providing management strategies/ideas to assist the child in the home, at school and in the community.
  • Direct skill teaching through a task based approach.
  • Task engagement: Providing alternative ways to encourage task engagement.
  • Underlying skills: Developing the underlying skills necessary to support whole body (gross motor) and hand dexterity (fine motor) skills, such as providing activities to support:
    • balance and coordination
    • strength and endurance
    • attention and alertness
    • body awareness
    • movement planning
to support attention.

Speech Therapy approaches and activities that can support the child with Down Sydnrome and/or their carers include:

  • Speech and language assessment to help the family to understand how the child is processing, understanding, learning and using language and communication.
  • Communication strategies: Providing the family with strategies and techniques to increase and enhance communication with the child.
  • Daily activities: Helping the child to understand the environment, routines and language.
  • Developing language: Helping the child to understand and use richer language and to use language more spontaneously.
  • Conversation skills: Developing conversation skills (e.g. back and forth exchange, turn taking).
  • Concept skills: Developing concept skills, especially abstract concepts, such as time (e.g. yesterday, before, after).
  • Visuals can be used to help with understanding and the child’s ability to express their needs, wants, thoughts and ideas.
  • Social skills: Development of social skills (i.e. knowing when, how to use language in social situations).
  • Enhancing verbal and non-verbal communication including natural gestures, speech, signs, pictures and written words.
  • Visual strategies: Using visual information to help understand, organise and plan the routine for the day.
  • Liaising with educational staff regarding the nature of the difficulties and ways to help the child to access the curriculum.

Why should I seek therapy for my child with Down Syndrome?

Diagnosis alone is NOT the solution. It simply opens the door to getting the help that is needed by arming all involved with the relevant information.

The ‘help’ still needs to be provided. The help that is provided (at least from a therapy perspective) will reflect:

  • First and foremost what medical intervention is needed.
  • What the parents/teachers/carers biggest concerns are for the child (i.e. what are the most significant functional challenges).
  • The specific areas that are problematic to the child (which will vary even within children with the same diagnosis).
  • The capacity of the child’s environments to meet the child’s needs.

If left untreated, the child with Down Syndrome may have difficulties with:

  • Following instructions within the home, kindergarten or school environment.
  • Vocabulary whereby a child cannot clearly get their message across due to limited word knowledge.
  • Understanding jokes and figurative language during interactions with others, and when watching TV shows and movies and reading books.
  • Learning to talk, speech intelligibility and clarity.
  • Managing a full school day due to poor strength and endurance.
  • Participating in sporting activities leading to an inactive lifestyle, increasing the risks of other health related issues such as obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease or similar conditions.
  • Self esteem and confidence when they realise their skills do not match their peers.
  • Bullying when others become more aware of the child’s difficulties.
  • Fine motor skills (e.g. writing, drawing and cutting) due to poor core stability, meaning they do not have a strong base to support the use of their arms and hands.
  • Completing self-care tasks (e.g. doing up shoelaces, buttons, zips, using cutlery).
  • Self regulation and behaviour as the child is unable to regulate themselves appropriately to settle and attend to a task for extended periods of time.
  • Accessing the curriculum because they are unable to attend to tasks long enough to complete assessment criteria.
  • Sleep habits, impacting upon skill development due to fatigue.
  • Social isolation because they are unable to cope in group situations or busy environments, impacting on their ability to form and maintain friendships.
  • Reading/understanding social situations and being perceived as ‘rude’ by others.
  • Social communication, such as eye contact, appropriate distance when talking to someone, turn-taking within a conversation.
  • Academic performance: Developing literacy skills such as reading and writing and coping in the academic environment.

More specific implications of not seeking treatment will be influenced by the common difficulties that are most influencing your individual child.

For more information see the relevant fact sheets under areas of concern or refer to the other relevant resources section below.

What does the diagnosis of Down Syndrome really mean for the child?

Diagnoses are used to label a specific set of symptoms that are being experienced by a child.

This label then helps to narrow down and specifically tailor what:

  • Other issues commonly occur simultaneously.
  • Medication might be appropriate.
  • Therapies might help the child (e.g. Medical, Occupational Therapy, Speech Therapy, Psychology).
  • Course of intervention (medical and/or allied health) might be and what outcome might be expected (prognosis).
  • Can be done to help the child.

A diagnosis helps the child and their carers (parents, teachers, health professionals, carers) to:

  • Access information about the relevant cluster of symptoms.
  • Communicate the salient features of the child’s challenges to all people involved in the child’s care.
  • Possibly interpret certain behaviours differently in light of the diagnosis.
  • Obtain information about what can be done to help the child.
  • Determine specifically where and how to help the child.
  • Access funding or services that might not otherwise be accessible.

Other Useful Resources

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