What is Pediatric Speech Therapy? A Beginner’s Guide

A lot of people think of speech therapy services are just for children with a lisp or stutter. Slurred speech, language delay, and stuttering are common reasons you might seek out a speech-language pathologist. But a specially trained speech therapist for kids can help restore your ability to swallow, improve a hoarse or raspy voice, and remediate short-term memory and thinking skills.

Ivy Rehab Speech Language Pathologist (SLP), Michelle Davis, MA, CCC-SLP, first became interested in the profession while in high school. Michelle job shadowed a speech pathologist who was working with a patient with memory loss after a car accident.

“She had no problem speaking; the problem was with her thinking,” Davis said. “I saw how life can change so quickly, and how I wanted to be a part of helping.”

Speech-language therapy can give people the right tools and exercises to improve memory and speech patterns after an accident, brain injury, or stroke. Davis also works with a lot of patients who have difficulty swallowing, known as dysphagia, so that they can get off a feeding tube. 

“I think 90 percent of the general public think that is all we do, work to help people talk, and that is just a small part of what we do,” she said. 

What is a pediatric speech therapist, and why should my child see one? 

A kids speech therapist is highly trained to evaluate and treat acute and chronic conditions from birth to death. They specialize in treating not just children, but a wide range of ages.

“I have treated babies, and I have treated a 104-year-old in hospice care,” Davis said. “That is what makes the profession so exciting and unique.” 

Who can benefit from speech therapy?

Speech-language pathology runs the gamut and spectrum of ages. While early intervention helps with speech delays, SLP is not just for young children. Some common diagnoses where a referral for speech therapy can help include:

  • Autism
  • Developmental delays
  • Genetic disorders
  • Stroke, brain injury, concussion, and other neurological conditions
  • Parkinson’s disease 
  • Dementia and Alzheimer’s disease 
  • Brain/throat/mouth cancers 
  • COPD, recurrent aspiration pneumonia, GERD/reflux, and seizures

Speech-language pathologists work with a wide variety of disorders that involve speech, language, reading, writing, comprehension, cognition, memory, attention, voice, swallowing disorders, and other behaviors. Based on a patient’s specific difficulty, speech therapy frequency and duration will often vary. 

Davis, the Dysphagia Specialty Team Leader, has extensive experience treating patients with a variety of SLP-related difficulties. Most of the patients she treats are adults, but Ivy Rehab also has clinicians who specialize in pediatric speech therapy. 

Pediatric Speech Therapy Services

Speech therapy is known to help those seeking treatment after a life-changing event, such as a stroke or an injury or accident. It’s also less recognized but very beneficial for improving voice clarity, rate of speech, misarticulation, enunciation, or correcting a strong accent. 

“It’s such a broad field I don’t think a lot of people understand all of the skills we can provide,” Davis said.

Due to this high demand and the wide range of services provided, you’ll never need to wonder, “Will I be able to find a pediatric speech therapist near me?”

Signs of Speech and Language Disorders in Toddlers and Young Children

  • Does not babble (4-7 months)
  • Does not understand what others say (7 months-2 years)
  • Says only a few words (12-18 months)
  • Words are not easily understood (18 months-2 years)
  • Does not put words together to make sentences (1.5-3 years)
  • Has trouble with early reading and writing skills (2.5-3 years)
  • Says p, b, m, h, and w incorrectly in words (1-2 years)
  • Says k, g, f, t, d, and n incorrectly in words (2-3 years)
  • Produces speech that is unclear, even to familiar people (2-3 years)
  • Struggles to say sounds or words (stuttering)

Speech therapists can help detect and correct early developmental delays. For children, early intervention and therapy can resolve improper speech patterns, improve reading, spelling, and writing, and help them keep pace with their peers. Early intervention and speech therapy activity is important so that young children don’t fall behind in developing spoken language and learning vital communication skills. Many SLPs work in schools and with children with autism in clinical settings. 

Parental involvement is another key to success. Speech therapists teach parents how to encourage a child to use expressive language and social cues. In speech-language pathology, they use playing and talking, games and books, and reward systems to stimulate language development. 

“Parents will say ‘oh they will outgrow it, let’s wait and see,’” Davis said. “It’s best to get the evaluation, to at least get some guidance and tips and tricks so they can be followed by a speech therapist, as well to make sure they are hitting those milestones.”

Signs of Speech and Language Disorders in Adults

  • Speaks in short, fragmented phrases (expressive aphasia)
  • Says words in the wrong order (expressive aphasia)
  • Struggles with using words and understanding others (global aphasia)
  • Difficulty imitating speech sounds (apraxia)
  • Inconsistent errors (apraxia)
  • Slow rate of speech
  • Slurred speech (dysarthria)
  • Hoarse or raspy voice (dysphonia)
  • Swallowing disorder or frequent coughing during eating (dysphagia)
  • Difficulty with attention, “thinking,” memory (cognition)

With adults, most recognize when they have a speech impediment or impairment. It can range from slurring or speaking softly to the tip-of-the-tongue syndrome. They notice “I can’t think of the words I want to say or I get lost in my train of thought,” Davis said.

“A lot of this can happen after a stroke or a brain injury or a fall or a concussion,” she said. “Brain injuries can bring on all of those types of issues.”

Even normal aging can cause memory impairment or moments of blanking out. Speech therapy activities and exercises can help keep the brain sharp and improve quality of life for elderly patients. SLPs can help identify signs of dementia or Alzheimer’s or refer patients for additional testing and specialists. 

Speech therapists also assist family members and caregivers of Alzheimer’s and dementia patients with how to manage and respond to certain behaviors and keep their loved one safe at home.

Difficulty swallowing, or coughing or choking during meals, is another common problem Davis treats in all ages. She shows patients different swallowing exercises and strengthening exercises for the muscles of the throat, along with recommendations for changing a person’s diet. It’s life-changing for a person to be able to eat out in public or attend family gatherings. 

“The most gratifying work that I do is helping people get off of feeding tubes,” she said. “Such a big part of our social lives is eating and going out to restaurants and family dinners. Depression can sink in.”

How Speech Language Pathology helps with more than speech issues

Speech language therapy involves working with children who have difficulty formulating sentences or have decreased vocabulary. It also includes re-acquisition of vocabulary and assists with word-finding/blocking issues that are common following a stroke or traumatic brain injury. 

Cognition Therapy

Cognition therapy involves working with individuals who have difficulty with concentration, memory, and high-level organization following a concussion, traumatic brain injury or dementia.  

Voice Therapy

Voice therapy involves two routes for patients with voice disorders. SLPs work with patients who have a hoarse, harsh or raspy voice secondary to overuse, nodules, polyps, and reflux, Davis said. Others need therapy to strengthen their voice associated with conditions such as Parkinson’s Disease, stroke, and degenerative diseases.

Swallowing Therapy

Swallowing therapy involves assessing swallows, either in the clinic or at the hospital with an x-ray, and working with the patient to treat and decrease the risk of coughing, choking, or aspiration during eating and swallowing.  

Where and how to seek out speech therapy?

Speech therapy is provided in a variety of settings: acute care hospitals, outpatient clinics, skilled nursing facilities, home care, and schools. The requirements for accessing treatment can vary from state to state and insurance providers. In most cases, speech therapy requires a referral. This is why it is important for patients and caregivers to express their concerns and talk to their doctor, Davis said. People need to know that help is out there.

“We are here to help; we just need to be guided to that person to help them,” she said. “They need to be educated to say ‘I am having this problem.’” 

A treatment plan, including the number and frequency of visits, is based on the severity of the impairment or how near you are to the initial injury date. In most cases, it’s better to start rehabilitation soon after the injury/onset. Gains can still be made as time passes, Davis said, but it becomes more strategy and compensation at that point.  

Speech therapy sessions typically last 30-45 minutes and the SLP plans the session prior to the patient arrival with tasks that are considered “just right,” meaning not too challenging to frustrate the patient, and not too easy so that positive changes and new skill development can occur. 

Davis also emphasizes that any treatment plan continues outside of therapy. It requires the patient’s and caregiver’s buy-in to practice exercises on a regular basis and work to change behaviors and speech patterns. 

“The key takeaway is really about how the span of your lifetime could involve speech therapy in some capacity,” she said. “Every person in the world has to communicate, has to eat and swallow safely to survive, has to have the ability to think, and speech therapy works with all of those things. It’s such a key part of every person’s life at any age.”

Professional Speech Language Pathologists

If you are struggling with your speech in any way, there is no need to feel ashamed, embarrassed, or suffer in silence. Don’t let a speech or language delay, memory problems, or a hoarse voice interfere with your job, work, or hobbies. Learn more about the pediatric speech therapist job description and how an SLP can be of help to you.  Let Ivy Rehab’s dedicated and highly trained speech pathologists help you speak with clarity and confidence! Talk to your doctor or contact a clinic near you to learn more about how we can help.


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