Speech Therapy Month: What is Speech Therapy?

| Live Your Life PT

This month we celebrate speech therapy, and set aside this time to recognize the important role speech-language pathologists (SLPs) play in helping people communicate, eat, and swallow safely. While many people associate speech therapy with helping children pronounce words, it actually supports individuals of all ages with a wide range of communication and swallowing challenges.

What Is Speech Therapy?

Speech therapy focuses on evaluating and treating difficulties related to communication and swallowing. This includes but is not limited to improving clients’ ability to speak clearly, understand language, express thoughts, and safely eat and drink.

Speech therapy is personalized. An SLP works with clients to optimize their treatment on an individual level.

Who Can Benefit from Speech Therapy?

Speech therapy isn’t just for one group of people. It can help:

  • Children with speech delays, language development issues, or learning differences
  • Adults recovering from stroke, brain injury, or neurological conditions
  • Older adults experiencing changes in speech, voice, or swallowing
  • Individuals with conditions affecting communication, such as Parkinson’s disease or dementia

What Does Speech Therapy Treat?

Speech therapy addresses several areas, including:

Speech Disorders: Difficulty producing sounds correctly, which can affect clarity and understanding.

Language Disorders: Challenges with understanding or using words, sentences, and conversations.

Voice Disorders: Problems with pitch, volume, or vocal quality that may affect how a person sounds.

Cognitive-Communication Disorders: Difficulties with memory, attention, problem-solving, and organization that impact communication.

Swallowing Disorders (Dysphagia): Difficulty safely chewing or swallowing food and liquids.

What Happens in Speech Therapy?

Speech therapy sessions are structured but flexible, based on individual needs. A speech-language pathologist may:

  • Assess communication or swallowing abilities
  • Develop personalized treatment plans with you
  • Use exercises to strengthen muscles involved in speech or swallowing
  • Practice conversation skills or language tasks
  • Teach strategies to improve memory, attention, and problem-solving

Therapy may also include education for family members and caregivers to support progress at home.

Why Speech Therapy Matters

Communication is essential for connecting with others, expressing needs, and maintaining independence. Swallowing safely is equally important for nutrition and overall health.

Speech therapy is about more than words. It is about helping people communicate, connect, and live safely and confidently. If you or a loved one are experiencing challenges with speech, language, or swallowing, seeking support can be a powerful step toward improvement.

Reference

  1. The Profession of Speech-Language Pathology. Asha.org. Published 2026. Accessed April 4, 2026. https://www.asha.org/students/speech-language-pathology/?srsltid=AfmBOopdAdcANLtOxnAjj3ZPfQRKYJYy1K-yd9xc0emCY0rLvz30Z2py
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