
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Pediatric speech therapy focuses on helping children who are still developing communication skills, using play-based and interactive activities to make learning engaging. Adult speech therapy typically addresses issues resulting from illness, injury, or aging, using more structured approaches to help individuals regain or maintain communication abilities. Additionally, adults are often more self-motivated and independent in their therapy participation than children, who usually require parental support and encouragement.
Initial signs that speech therapy may be beneficial include difficulty pronouncing sounds clearly, challenges understanding or expressing language, stuttering or fluency problems, feeding difficulties, voice concerns, or social communication challenges. An evaluation by a Speech-Language Pathologist can determine whether therapy is recommended. We provide a comprehensive initial assessment that identifies specific areas of concern and establishes a baseline for treatment.
A comprehensive speech therapy evaluation typically includes:
Case History: Discussion of developmental history, medical background, and specific concerns with parents or caregivers
Observation: Assessment of communication skills during play, conversation, or structured activities
Formal Testing: Standardized assessments targeting specific areas such as articulation, language comprehension, language expression, voice, fluency, and swallowing
Recommendations: Detailed feedback regarding findings and treatment recommendations if therapy is indicated
Evaluations usually take up to 90 minutes, and you'll receive preliminary findings and a plan of care during or shortly after the appointment.
After the evaluation, the Speech-Language Pathologist will review findings with you, discuss whether therapy is recommended, and explain the reasoning behind recommendations. If therapy is needed, the clinician will outline:
Specific goals for treatment
Recommended frequency and duration of sessions
Strategies to support progress at home
Expected timeline for improvements
If therapy is not recommended, alternative resources and options will be discussed.
We provide treatment for a wide variety of conditions, including:
Articulation and phonological disorders (unclear speech)
Language delays and disorders (receptive and expressive language difficulties)
Stuttering and fluency disorders
Voice disorders (hoarseness, vocal strain)
Apraxia of speech (motor speech planning difficulties)
Swallowing disorders (dysphagia)
Speech difficulties following stroke or brain injury
Communication disorders related to autism spectrum disorder and other neurodevelopmental conditions
Session frequency varies based on individual needs, disorder severity, and therapeutic goals. Common frequency patterns include:
Once weekly: Typical for mild to moderate disorders
Twice weekly: Often recommended for more complex conditions
Three or more times weekly: May be appropriate for severe disorders
or intensive programs like LSVT LOUD or PROMPT therapy
Session length is 30 minutes. Your Speech-Language Pathologist will recommend the most appropriate frequency and duration for your specific situation.
Occupational therapy helps individuals regain independence by addressing physical, cognitive, and emotional barriers to daily functioning. Therapists use task breakdown (simplifying complex activities into manageable steps), skill development through targeted exercises, adaptive strategies and assistive devices, environmental modifications (such as adding grab bars or improving accessibility), and cognitive rehabilitation. The goal is to empower clients to perform self-care, work, school, hobbies, and community activities with greater ease and confidence.
Occupational therapists work with individuals of all ages who need support with daily activities. Common conditions include injuries and trauma (fractures, burns, spinal cord injury, stroke), chronic neurological conditions (Parkinson's disease, MS, cerebral palsy, autism), cognitive conditions (dementia, Alzheimer's, brain injury), physical conditions (arthritis, muscle weakness), post-surgical recovery, mental health challenges, age-related changes, and developmental delays. Treatment is always individualized and client-centered, focusing on meaningful life activities.
Occupational therapy helps individuals manage their responses to sensory input, such as sound, touch, movement, and light. Therapists use sensory integration techniques to improve regulation, attention, and everyday functioning.
Common challenges include:
Hypersensitivity: Feeling overwhelmed by sounds, textures, or touch.
Hyposensitivity: Seeking strong sensory input or not noticing certain sensations.
Difficulty distinguishing sensations: Trouble telling textures, movements, or objects apart.
How OT helps:
Sensory integration activities that use movement, touch, and body-awareness tasks to support better processing.
Sensory diets with daily activities that help maintain calm, focus, and regulation.
Environmental adjustments, such as reducing noise or modifying lighting, can help reduce sensory overload.
Play-based skill-building to improve tolerance and coping with challenging sensations.
Benefits: Better self-regulation, improved focus, reduced anxiety, and more confidence and independence in daily routines.
Yes, we offer teletherapy sessions; however, your clinician will determine if teletherapy is the most appropriate option based on your or your child’s individual needs.
Neurodiversity affirming therapy celebrates the differences that make each person unique rather than focusing on how one person differs from what is considered "normal." This approach recognizes that neurodivergent ways of being (such as autism, ADHD, and other neurological variations) are a natural human variation, not a pathology to be corrected.
Key principles include:
Strengths-based approach: Focusing on unique strengths rather than deficits
Self-advocacy: Encouraging individuals to advocate for their needs
Acceptance: Recognizing that everyone's brain works differently
Inclusivity: Addressing societal barriers and discrimination
Mental health support: Building self-esteem and reducing internalized shame
Traditional therapy often focused on "fixing" or correcting differences, viewing neurodivergence as something to overcome. Neurodiversity affirming therapy instead:
Celebrates neurodivergent traits as valuable aspects of identity
Focuses on helping individuals thrive rather than conform to neurotypical standards
Addresses challenges while affirming strengths and unique abilities
Reduces internalized ableism and shame
Supports better mental health by fostering self-acceptance and belonging
Recognizes that well-being is more dependent on support and acceptance
Social Skills Training (SST) is a therapeutic approach designed to help individuals improve their ability to communicate thoughts and emotions, initiate and maintain conversations, navigate social interactions, and regulate emotions effectively.
Benefits those who struggle with:
Social anxiety and fear of rejection
Initiating or maintaining friendships
Understanding body language and facial expressions
Turn-taking and active listening
Empathy and perspective-taking
Managing self-consciousness in groups
Social skills therapy is particularly beneficial for individuals with autism spectrum disorder, anxiety disorders, developmental disabilities, ADHD, and other conditions affecting social communication.
Social skills therapy employs several evidence-based techniques:
Role-playing and behavioral rehearsal: Practicing real-life social scenarios in a safe environment
Modeling and direct instruction: Therapist demonstrates desired social behaviors
Positive reinforcement: Praising progress and effort
Video feedback: Recording interactions to help clients observe their own behavior
Social stories: Using narratives to teach social concepts
Real-life practice (in vivo exposure): Practicing skills in actual social settings
Group social skills training: Learning from peers in structured group settings
Treatment is tailored to the individual's age, developmental stage, interests, and specific social challenges.
An occupational therapy evaluation assesses your ability to perform daily activities and identifies barriers to independence. The evaluation includes:
Occupational Profile: Gathering information about your history, interests, values, goals, and daily routines
Motor Skills Assessment: Evaluating strength, mobility, coordination, gross motor skills, and fine motor control
Sensory Assessment: Understanding how you process sensory information
Cognitive and Emotional Regulation: Assessing thinking, processing, and emotional control
Activities of Daily Living (ADL): Testing ability to perform self-care tasks like dressing, grooming, and eating
Functional Performance: Observing you perform relevant daily tasks
Clinical Observations and Standardized Assessments: Using both informal and formal testing methods
Evaluations can take up to 90 minutes and include discussion of findings, recommendations, and treatment planning.
Feeding therapy addresses both the physical and behavioral aspects of eating difficulties. The process includes:
Initial Evaluation: Assessment of feeding history, oral motor skills, and observation of eating various foods and drinking from different cups. The therapist may trial different techniques during the evaluation.
Individualized Treatment Plan: Based on diagnosis, therapy may focus on:
Oral motor exercises to improve strength and coordination
Sensory desensitization for food refusal or selectivity
Compensatory feeding strategies
Gradual diet expansion through small, positive changes
Building confidence and positive associations with eating
Home Program: Immediately after evaluation, you'll receive strategies to use at home. After each session, the home program is adjusted as skills improve and needs change.
Progress Timeline: Every child progresses at their own pace. Progress is not always consistent, but with regular therapy and home practice, most children show improvement in their feeding skills and diet variety.
PROMPT stands for Prompts for Restructuring Oral Muscular Phonetic Targets. It is a tactile-kinesthetic (touch and movement) approach to speech therapy in which the clinician manually guides accurate movements during speech production by placing hands on the client's lips, jaw, tongue, and chin.
How it works:
The therapist uses specific touch cues to help the client understand the correct placement and movement of speech articulators
Tactile-kinesthetic input enhances sensory feedback and facilitates motor planning
Treatment focuses on developing motor control and eliminating unnecessary muscle movements
Goals are chosen to reflect complex interactions among physical-sensory, cognitive-linguistic, and social-emotional domains.
A typical PROMPT therapy program involves:
Initial Assessment (Week 1): Comprehensive evaluation of oral motor skills, speech patterns, and communication goals. The therapist assesses articulation, oral structure, spontaneous speech, language abilities, and jaw/lip/tongue movements.
Treatment Planning (Week 2): Based on assessment results, individualized therapy goals are developed. Parents receive detailed explanations of target sounds and home practice strategies.
Active Therapy Phase (Weeks 3+): Typical programs involve twice-weekly 45-minute sessions. Sessions include:
Motor phoneme warm-up exercises
Tactile-kinesthetic cueing for target sounds, words, and phrases
Progressive difficulty increase (duration, amplitude, complexity)
Multisensory integration activities
Progress Reviews: Every 3 months, progress is evaluated and treatment plans are adjusted as abilities advance. Children ages 2-8 often show the most dramatic results due to neuroplasticity during these developmental years.
LSVT LOUD (Lee Silverman Voice Treatment) is an intensive, evidence-based speech therapy program specifically designed for individuals with Parkinson's disease. However, it can also benefit people with other neurological conditions affecting voice and speech.
How it works:
Targets increased vocal loudness through structured, high-effort voice exercises Focuses on helping the brain recognize what a "normal" loud voice feels like Uses principles of motor learning with repetitive vocal tasks Improves not only voice volume but also speech clarity and intelligibility
Program Structure:
Duration: 4 weeks
Frequency: 4 days per week
Session Length: One hour per session
Total Commitment: 16 one-hour sessions
Who benefits most:
Individuals in the early stages of Parkinson's disease diagnosis
Those with higher cognitive ability
People are motivated to complete daily home exercises
Those reporting being frequently asked to repeat statements
Results and Benefits:
Increased voice volume and speech clarity
Improved facial expression and overall communication confidenc
Better breath support and respiratory controlSecondary improvements in swallowing function, reducing aspiration pneumonia risk
Enhanced quality of life and social engagement
Improved cognitive engagement through focused, high-effort practice
Carryover benefits into daily movement and overall communication
Participants typically report significant improvements in communication
confidence and quality of life following program completion.