My child is diagnosed with autism, can't talk, and his mouth muscles are not very good. When he was almost three years old, he sometimes drooled and talked "ahhh". What should I do?

You can do some oral muscle training: by massaging the face, neck and inside of the mouth, you can activate the face and strengthen the muscle groups in the mouth.

It can greatly help and improve chewing and swallowing functions.

With the help of tools, repeated practice and reinforcement can make the jaw, lips, tip of the tongue, tongue surface, tongue edge and tongue root emit correct pronunciation patterns, thus achieving the purpose of oral movement intervention.

At the beginning of training, the child's lips and tongue may feel tired, which is a good phenomenon, indicating that the child's muscle strength has improved. With the continuous training, fatigue will disappear with the increase of muscle strength.

Parents must insist on doing oral muscles. At the beginning of training, some children will cry. Don't cry, parents will feel bad about not interfering and not training, which will affect their children's future intervention, so parents must insist.