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Speech Therapist
2 months ago
A home health speech therapist, or speech-language pathologist (SLP), provides one-on-one care to patients in their homes to help them manage communication and language difficulties, swallowing problems, and cognitive disorders. They may also help patients with augmentative communication. Responsibilities: Home health speech therapists, also known as speech-language pathologists (SLPs), provide one-on-one care to patients in their homes to help them manage communication and language difficulties. Their responsibilities include: Evaluations • Assessing patients' needs, including medical, psychosocial, and environmental needs. They also evaluate speech, language, and swallowing difficulty levels. Treatment plans • Developing and implementing individualized treatment plans with the patient and physician. These plans address specific functional needs, such as improving pronunciation, strengthening speech muscles, and learning to speak correctly. Therapy • Helping patients with speech, language, augmentative communication, and feeding. This includes conducting oral, pharyngeal, and motor breathing exercises, and teaching clients how to make sounds and improve their voices. Goal setting • Establishing realistic, measurable goals for patients to achieve and evaluating their progress. Communication • Helping patients communicate verbally and nonverbally, and overcoming cognitive disorders that affect their ability to communicate. They also counsel clients and their families on how to cope with communication and swallowing disorders. Collaboration • Working with other members of the patient's care team, such as registered dieticians, medical social workers, physical therapists, occupational therapists, and homecare nurses. They also communicate with doctors, teachers, and specialists to coordinate care. Documentation • Completing paperwork and updating charts. Documentation requirements may vary by agency, but each patient encounter is documented. Visit notes describe patient status, treatment, and response, teaching and response, assessment of the visit, and plans for future visits Qualifications: Education • Have a master's or doctoral degree from an accredited program in communicative sciences and disorders. The program must be accredited by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association's (ASHA) Council on Academic Accreditation in Audiology and Speech-Language Pathology (CAA) or another accrediting agency recognized by the US Department of Education. Clinical experience • Have at least one year of clinical experience in speech-language pathology. You may also need to complete 1,260 hours of supervised postgraduate clinical experience. • Licenses and certifications • Be certified to practice speech-language pathology and have a valid CPR certification. You may also need to have a current ASHA certification. Other requirements • Have a valid driver's license and an insured automobile Compensation: $42 - $55 hourly
• Home health speech therapists, also known as speech-language pathologists (SLPs), provide one-on-one care to patients in their homes to help them manage communication and language difficulties. Their responsibilities include:Evaluations • Assessing patients' needs, including medical, psychosocial, and environmental needs. They also evaluate speech, language, and swallowing difficulty levels.Treatment plans • Developing and implementing individualized treatment plans with the patient and physician. These plans address specific functional needs, such as improving pronunciation, strengthening speech muscles, and learning to speak correctly.Therapy • Helping patients with speech, language, augmentative communication, and feeding. This includes conducting oral, pharyngeal, and motor breathing exercises, and teaching clients how to make sounds and improve their voices.Goal setting • Establishing realistic, measurable goals for patients to achieve and evaluating their progress.Communication • Helping patients communicate verbally and nonverbally, and overcoming cognitive disorders that affect their ability to communicate. They also counsel clients and their families on how to cope with communication and swallowing disorders.Collaboration • Working with other members of the patient's care team, such as registered dieticians, medical social workers, physical therapists, occupational therapists, and homecare nurses. They also communicate with doctors, teachers, and specialists to coordinate care.Documentation • Completing paperwork and updating charts. Documentation requirements may vary by agency, but each patient encounter is documented. Visit notes describe patient status, treatment, and response, teaching and response, assessment of the visit, and plans for future visits