At Sajjad Rehabilitation & Therapy Centre in Patna, we help children and adults who repeat sounds, stretch sounds, get stuck on words, or feel stress while speaking. Therapy is planned to improve fluency and make speaking feel easier in daily life.
Speech may begin with repeated sounds, syllables, or short words before the message comes out.
Some people hold a sound too long before the rest of the word can come out smoothly.
Sometimes no sound comes out for a moment even when the person knows exactly what to say.
Extra effort, blinking, jaw tension, or body movement may appear during hard moments of speech.
Some people avoid speaking because of worry, embarrassment, or fear of getting stuck again.
The person may change words, stay silent, or skip talking in some situations to avoid stuttering.
We first check the type of stuttering, how often it happens, what tension is seen, and which speaking situations feel hardest. Then we build a plan that matches the person's age and daily needs.
Therapy may include easier speech patterns, ways to handle moments of stuttering with less struggle, and confidence building for real conversations. Family support is also important, especially for children.
Therapy helps the person speak with less tension, less rushing, and more control during hard moments.
We teach ways to start speech more gently, slow the pace when needed, and move through words with less effort.
The goal is not only clinic practice but more comfortable speaking at home, school, work, and social places.
We check speech pattern, tension, confidence, and the situations where stuttering becomes harder.
Therapy starts with easier speaking techniques and simple fluency tasks matched to the person's level.
The person practices talking in more natural situations like conversation, school, work, or phone speaking.
Home practice and family support help fluency skills stay useful beyond the therapy room.
Early support can reduce tension, frustration, and the habit of pushing hard through words.
Children and adults often speak more comfortably when help starts before fear and avoidance become stronger.
Therapy can support smoother speaking in class, presentations, conversations, and daily communication tasks.
Families learn how to respond calmly and help speaking feel safer instead of more pressured.
We keep stuttering therapy practical, respectful, and focused on speaking that feels easier in real daily situations.
Get a clear speech evaluation and a therapy plan that matches the person's fluency and communication needs.
Stuttering, also called stammering, is a speech fluency problem where a person may repeat sounds or words, stretch sounds, or get stuck before a word comes out.
Some children go through a short phase of normal disfluency, but if stuttering lasts, gets worse, or the child shows tension or frustration while speaking, it is a good idea to get an evaluation.
Anxiety does not cause stuttering, but stress, pressure, or excitement can make stuttering more noticeable. Therapy can also help with confidence and fear around speaking.
Yes. Speech therapy can help adults who stutter by teaching easier speech patterns, ways to manage moments of stuttering, and strategies for speaking with more confidence.
The time needed is different for each person. Some people improve within months, while others need longer support to build fluency and confidence in daily speaking.
Family can help by listening patiently, not finishing words, speaking calmly, reducing pressure to talk fast, and using the communication strategies taught in therapy.