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Lauren Nirsimloo Speech Pathologist in Sydney, Australia | Medical and health



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Lauren Nirsimloo Speech Pathologist

Locality: Sydney, Australia

Phone: +61 422 232 984



Address: Stanhope Gardens 2768 Sydney, NSW, Australia

Website:

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25.01.2022 What not to say to someone who stutters



25.01.2022 Today is the first day of Better Hearing and Speech Month! All month long we will be highlighting the importance of human communication in the age of technology! Here are 10 tips on how to get kids to step away from their screens: http://on.asha.org/1DZkAkx

25.01.2022 Learning Difficulties Australia recently released a Position Statement on Approaches to Reading Instruction, of which they support http://bit.ly/1JF2xqC

22.01.2022 This army vet struggles with a bad stammer, but still reads to his daughter every night until she falls asleep. Take my feels! via Caters News Agency



22.01.2022 Something to remember!

20.01.2022 This man is speaking a brand new language. You can’t see or hear itit’s communicated through touch. For a visual description and transcript, click here: https://goo.gl/bnjvHu

19.01.2022 Check out this short film



16.01.2022 MUM'S POWERFUL FACEBOOK POST ABOUT THE INSENSITIVE THINGS PEOPLE SAY ABOUT HER BABY WITH DOWN'S SYNDROME... "Here is my baby girl, Louise. She is 4 months old,... has two legs two arms, and one extra chromosome. Please, when you meet a Louise, do not ask her mother, Was it not detected during pregnancy? Either it was, and the parents took the decision to keep the baby. Or it wasn’t and the surprise was great enough that there’s no need to revisit it. Bear in mind that mothers have a tendency to feel guilty about each and every thing, so a surprising extra chromosome I don’t need to tell you. Don’t tell her mother, It’s your baby no matter what. No. It’s my baby, period. Plus: ‘nomatterwhat’ is quite an ugly name; I’d rather call her Louise. Don’t tell her mother, As she is a Down’s baby, she will etc. No. She is a 4-month-old baby who happens to have Down’s Syndrome. It’s not what she IS, it’s what she HAS. You wouldn’t say she’s a cancer baby. Don’t say, They’re like this, they’re like that. They all have their features, their character, their own tastes, their life. They are as different between them as you are from you neighbour. I know that if you haven’t experienced it, you don’t think about it, but words do matter. They can comfort and they can hurt. So just give it a thought, especially if you’re a doctor or nurse of any kind. I usually don’t make my status ‘public’ on Facebook, but this one will be. You can read it and share it as you want. Because each year (in France) there are 500 new ‘mothers of Louise’ who can have a day ruined by those kind of words. I know it’s not meant to hurt. But you just need to know." #sun7

11.01.2022 *Images included in graphics are used under license from Shutterstock.com.

09.01.2022 How do children learn language? Noam Chomsky's long-standing theory has stated that children are "hardwired" with a template for grammar. But now new research is suggesting otherwise. What are your thoughts?

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