Speech Therapy Stuttering Therapy

Young Children and Stuttering

A large percentage of children between the ages of 2 1/2 and 7 will go through a period of stuttering. Close to 80% of those will outgrow it without direct therapy. Predicting who will and will not outgrow their stutter is not always a simple thing, and families should not wait until the child is six or older to consult with a fluency trained speech pathologist. We know that early support (before starting kindergarten) provides the best prognosis for alleviation of stuttering. The longer a family waits to get qualified support, the harder it is for the child to develop a new habit of fluency.

Alida Engel, CCC-SLP, BCS-SCF* provides Individual fluency therapy for young children. Parents are coached to help advance and maintain their young child’s progress during the many hours of each week when they are not in formal therapy.

young child

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teen age

Teens and Stuttering

Teens who stutter have been shown to have difficulty in many social situations. Stuttering during these socially self-conscious years can be especially challenging. Despite this, not all teens are willing to accept therapy. Special sensitivity is required to help them make the attitude, perception, and behavior shifts needed to “stutter more easily” and feel good about themselves.

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Adults and Stuttering

For adults, fluency techniques alone are insufficient. Adult stuttering therapy also requires addressing the habits developed over a lifetime of avoiding and working around social, academic, and workplace speaking situations which for many are accompanied by self-conscious discomfort. Such habits can lead to social frustration, impede personal fulfillment, and hinder education and career advancement. Adults are helped to confront their fears and avoidances, to reduce secondary behaviors (i.e. clenching jaw muscles, resisting eye contact, etc.), and to enter speaking situations with confidence.

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SLP Alida Engel, CCC-SLP, BCS-SCF*'s relevant training and experience with stuttering:

Alida Engel, CCC-SLP, BCS-SCF* is a Board Certified Specialist in Fluency (stuttering), making her one of less than 200 such practitioners in the US and Canada. BCS-Fs have acquired a high level of clinical expertise in treating fluency disorders, possess advanced knowledge, and have demonstrated a commitment to serving people with fluency disorders. The BCS-F designation is a program of the American Speech, Language, and Hearing Association (ASHA).

Alida Engel, CCC-SLP, BCS-SCF* strives, through her continuing professional education choices, to maintain currency in major areas of speech therapy so that she can offer her patients state of the art approaches to diagnoses and therapy. Over the years she has worked to continuously update her knowledge and refine her professional skills in many areas. Among the conferences attended and courses sha has taken are the following:

SpeechEasy Evaluation

SpeechEasy is a fluency tool used to reduce stuttering and to help increase fluency.

We also evaluate patients for use of the SpeechEasy in-ear device, which uses delayed and altered auditory feedback to reduce stuttering. Speech Pathologist Alida Engel, CCC-SLP, BCS-SCF* has had special training to evaluate effectiveness for SpeechEasy candidates, to fine-tune the devices, and to provide coaching in techniques to optimize effectiveness.

SpeechEasy PD (for Parkinson’s disease patients) — The SpeechEasy device can also enhance the fluency of people with Parkinson’s disease. Alida Engel, CCC-SLP, BCS-SCF* provides evaluation, final adjustment, and coaching for this purpose, as well.

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