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Central Indiana’s Paradigm Health speech therapy team helps dementia patients learn skills to overcome communication deficits.  

Speech Therapist Assessment

No matter the stage of dementia you or a loved one may be in, gathering education and finding clinically trained partners to help navigate the everchanging communication challenges that are a part of the disease is critical. A valuable part of the caregiving team is a speech therapist.   

As  Alzheimer’s disease  and other related dementias destroy brain cells, a significant symptom, known as “aphasia,” is losing the ability to speak and to understand speech which is one of the first symptoms identified in people with dementia. Memory loss is usually the most common symptom of dementia  but in some cases, patients lose their ability to speak first.  Aphasia can range from simply forgetting a word to the complete loss of the ability to speak. Being proactive and seeking help is the first step in maintaining speech memory and recall. 

“A speech therapist or speech language pathologist (SLP) is responsible for meeting with the patient diagnosed with dementia to assess and stage of the disease from a communication standpoint,” shares Paradigm Health speech therapist Matt Jones. “We also provide education to the patient, their family and any extended caregivers so that they have the information and the tools to maximize communication.” 

Some of the roles a SLP may perform include: 

  • Providing prevention information to individuals and groups known to be at risk for dementia as well as to individuals working with those at risk.  
  • Counseling persons with dementia and their families regarding communication-related issues and providing information about the nature of dementia and its course.

  • Developing treatment plans; providing treatment to maintain cognitive-communication and functional abilities at the highest level throughout the course of the underlying disease; and documenting treatment outcomes.  

If you are wondering what difference speech therapy can make for you or your loved one, the benefits of speech therapy can help make a difference in providing restorative therapy that focuses on restoring or improving impaired functions such as retraining the memory on how to complete a budget, manage medications or improve overall problem-solving challenges.  

“Other benefits of speech therapy include helping a patient learn and put into practice compensatory  strategies that focus on teaching the individual specific methods and skills to compensate for or overcome deficits that are not amenable to retraining,” says Jones. “Those might include such tactics as teaching the patient to utilize external aids such as visual reminders, daily planners, memory books and calendars. 

Patients also learn cognitive exercises to complete daily to help improve deficits and maintain newly acquired information helping to enhance day-to-day communication and stimulate memory. For more information on how Paradigm Health can help call 317-735-6001 or visit myparadigmhealth.com. 

 

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