The Speech-Language Pathologist (SLP) evaluates, diagnoses, and treats patients with speech, language, voice, cognitive-communication, and swallowing disorders. Working across pediatric or adult populations, the SLP develops individualized treatment plans to improve patient outcomes in hospitals, outpatient clinics, schools, or home health settings.
Conduct comprehensive evaluations of speech, language, cognitive, and swallowing abilities.
Develop and implement individualized treatment plans based on clinical findings.
Provide direct speech therapy to patients with a wide range of communication or swallowing disorders.
Document patient progress, maintain records, and communicate with interdisciplinary care teams.
Educate patients, families, and caregivers about therapy techniques and home programs.
Participate in care planning, discharge coordination, and multidisciplinary meetings.
Ensure compliance with applicable regulations and professional standards.
Supervise SLP assistants or clinical fellows (if applicable).
Education: Master’s degree in Speech-Language Pathology from an accredited program
Licensure:
State SLP license (as required)
Certificate of Clinical Competence in Speech-Language Pathology (CCC-SLP) from ASHA
Certifications: BLS (Basic Life Support) required
Experience: 0–2+ years (New grads welcome; CFY support may be available)
Strong interpersonal, communication, and documentation skills
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