Apraxia can make it difficult to plan and coordinate the movements needed for clear speech. We provide individualized apraxia therapy for children, teens, and adults to improve speech production, increase communication confidence, and support everyday communication success.
Apraxia is a motor speech disorder that affects the brain’s ability to plan and coordinate the movements required for speech. Individuals with apraxia know what they want to say, but may have difficulty producing sounds, syllables, and words consistently and accurately.
These challenges can affect communication at home, school, work, and in social settings. Our speech-language pathologists conduct comprehensive evaluations to identify speech motor planning difficulties and understand how they impact daily communication.
Using evidence-based therapy approaches, we develop individualized treatment plans that focus on improving speech accuracy, motor planning, speech intelligibility, and functional communication. Therapy is tailored to each person’s age, strengths, and communication goals to support meaningful progress in real-world situations.
We support children, teens, and adults with apraxia and other motor speech challenges. If any of the following signs sound familiar, a speech-language evaluation may be beneficial.
Improved motor speech skills can support clearer communication and greater confidence in everyday life.
Improved speech accuracy and intelligibility during daily communication.
Stronger coordination of the movements required for speech production.
Greater comfort communicating at home, school, work, and in social settings.
Improved ability to communicate effectively across everyday situations.
A structured and supportive approach focused on building accurate and consistent speech skills.
We assess speech production, motor planning abilities, and communication needs.
Goals are tailored to each individual’s age, strengths, and communication priorities.
Targeted intervention focuses on speech motor planning, accuracy, and intelligibility.
Practical strategies and guided practice help reinforce progress across environments.
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Apraxia is a motor speech disorder that affects the ability to plan and coordinate the movements needed for speech. It can impact speech accuracy, consistency, and intelligibility.
Yes. Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS) affects children, while acquired apraxia of speech can occur in adults following stroke, brain injury, or certain neurological conditions.
Unlike articulation or phonological disorders, apraxia primarily affects motor planning for speech. Individuals often know what they want to say but have difficulty coordinating the movements needed to say it accurately
The duration of therapy varies depending on the individual’s needs, severity of symptoms, goals, and consistency of practice. Progress is monitored regularly throughout treatment.
Yes. When appropriate and with consent, we collaborate with educators, physicians, therapists, and other professionals to support communication goals across settings.
Insurance coverage varies depending on your specific plan, provider network, diagnosis, and eligibility requirements. We accept most major insurance plans. Please contact us for insurance verification and details regarding coverage.