Our Services

  • Speech Therapy

    Speech Therapy targets four main areas: speech, receptive skills, expressive skills and feeding/swallowing delays or disorders. When therapists work with children on speech, they’re looking to improve a child’s articulation, decrease stuttering or treat voice disorders

    When working with children to improve their receptive language, a SLP is helping children process and understand the information they’re receiving from others, like following directions.

    When speech therapists work with children on expressive language, they are helping children learn how to produce words and combine words into phrases and sentences to communicate their wants and needs and to share information.

    Feeding and swallowing disorders are complex. Your speech therapist can work on things like helping children learn to produce a productive and timely swallow and/or accepting new foods and textures.

  • Occupational Therapy

    An occupational therapist can work with your child to develop independence in dressing, hygiene, meal participation, and grooming activities. Occupational therapy can also enhance skills necessary for school participation: handwriting, cutting, organization, following directions, attention to task, problem solving, and playing with their friends. Your occupational therapist will work with you and your child to help understand if difficulties or delays are a result of differences in hand/eye coordination, fine motor skills, cognitive skills and maturity, social skills development and the ability to establish routines.

    Occupational Therapy is also helpful for small children with medical or developmental backgrounds that are experiencing delayed milestones. Early intervention is a big part of helping a kid stay on track!

  • Physical Therapy

    A physical therapy evaluation can be scheduled by appointment only at this time.

    A physical therapist will work with your child to help them move their bodies. They strive to improve strength, motion, flexibility, and patterns of movement for children with various delays, injuries or diagnosis. Gross motor skills are the name of the PT game!