PALMS PHYSIOTHERAPY & ALLIED HEALTH
📞9376 1443 - Noranda 📞6285 6185 - Malaga
PALMS PHYSIOTHERAPY & ALLIED HEALTH
Speech Pathology Services - Clinic & Mobile Visits
Explore the communication, language and swallowing presentations we commonly help with across the lifespan.
Speech Pathology Assessments We Do
Assessment of swallowing safety and function, with practical strategies and recommendations to support eating, drinking and day-to-day confidence.
Practical mealtime plans and strategies for home, school and support settings.
Oral function assessment with practical strategies and written guidance where needed.
AAC options, trials and partner training to support functional communication.
Speech pathology support for feeding, chewing, drinking and swallowing concerns.
Specialised Speech Pathology Support
Parent coaching with a Hanen-trained Speech Therapist to build social communication in daily routines.
Plain-language guidance on IDDSI food and fluid levels to support safer swallowing.
Funding Types We Support
Eligible clients may access Medicare-rebated speech pathology sessions with a GP referral.
Eligible clients may access Medicare-rebated speech pathology sessions with an NDIS plan.
We support eligible veterans with physiotherapy and allied health services under DVA funding.
Home-based speech pathology for communication, swallowing and cognitive-communication support.
Self-funded appointments with flexible options across clinic, mobile and telehealth.
Assessment and support for communication, cognition, voice and swallowing needs in the home environment.
Other Speech Related Items We Support
Assessment and recommendations to make eating and drinking safer, easier and more independent.
Setup and seating guidance to improve comfort, endurance and swallow safety.
Support for restricted eating, texture aversions and calmer mealtimes.
Speech Therapy (also called Speech Pathology) focuses on assessing, diagnosing, and treating communication and swallowing difficulties. At Palms Physiotherapy & Allied Health, our speech pathologists support children, teens, and adults to improve speech clarity, language skills, social communication, voice and fluency and swallowing safety.
Speech therapy can help with a wide range of concerns, including:
Speech delays in children: Supporting speech sound development, clarity, and age-appropriate communication.
Speech sound disorders: Including articulation (sound production) and phonological (sound patterns) difficulties.
Language disorders: Helping with both receptive language (understanding) and expressive language (using words and sentences).
Swallowing and feeding difficulties (dysphagia): Supporting people who have difficulty swallowing safely due to conditions such as stroke, traumatic brain injury, or neurological conditions.
Social communication differences: Supporting conversational skills, turn-taking, perspective-taking, and understanding non-verbal communication.
Stuttering and fluency disorders: Helping clients manage fluency, reduce effort/tension, and build confidence in communication.
Paediatric speech therapy supports children with speech, language, communication, and early literacy needs using evidence-based and child-friendly approaches. Sessions may be play-based (especially for younger children), while still being structured and goal-directed.
Common areas we support include:
Adult speech therapy supports adults with communication and swallowing needs related to neurological conditions, injury, medical events, or age-related changes. Therapy is practical, functional, and designed around everyday participation (home, work, community).
Common areas we support include:
NDIS speech therapy is available for self-managed and plan-managed participants. Therapy may focus on functional communication goals, speech clarity, social interaction and participation, and AAC support where required. We collaborate with participants, families, support coordinators, schools, and relevant providers to support practical, meaningful outcomes.
Dysphagia (swallowing) support helps when swallowing difficulties affect hydration, nutrition, safety and confidence with eating and drinking. Our speech pathologists can complete clinical assessments (as appropriate), provide strategies for safer swallowing, recommend targeted exercises when indicated, and support shared-care referral pathways with GPs/ENT/medical teams when needed.
Experienced Speech Pathologists: Skilled in paediatric and adult communication and swallowing support.
NDIS Provider (self- and plan-managed): Therapy is aligned to participant goals and everyday function.
Family-Centred Approach: We involve parents, carers, and supports where appropriate so strategies carry over into real life.
Collaborative, Multidisciplinary Care: We work alongside our broader allied health team when integrated support is beneficial.
Our sensory room and kids therapy gym can support therapy goals through a motivating, functional environment—particularly helpful for children who benefit from movement-based learning and sensory regulation strategies. These spaces may be used when clinically relevant to support engagement, attention, participation, and goal progress.
Palms Physiotherapy & Allied Health offers a range of therapy services and specialised supports. You can browse by therapy area, explore specialised services, or learn more about the facilities and equipment we use in-clinic .
Speech pathologists (speech therapists) support children and adults with a wide range of speech, language, voice, fluency, and swallowing needs. Below is a practical overview of the common areas we assess and treat at Palms.
· Articulation Disorders: Difficulty producing specific speech sounds clearly (e.g., /s/, /r/, /l/).
· Phonological Disorders: Patterns/rules of sound errors that reduce intelligibility (e.g., fronting, final consonant deletion).
· Apraxia of Speech: Motor planning/programming difficulty; speech errors may be inconsistent and speech can sound “choppy.”
· Dysarthria: Speech changes due to weakness, tone or coordination differences affecting speech muscles.
· Expressive Language Disorder: Difficulty using words/sentences to share ideas, tell stories, ask questions, or use grammar accurately.
· Receptive Language Disorder: Difficulty understanding spoken/written language, following instructions, or processing complex language.
· Mixed Expressive–Receptive Language Disorder: Difficulties with both understanding and expressing language.
· Developmental Delays: Support when speech and language milestones are developing more slowly than expected.
· Aphasia: Language difficulty often after stroke/brain injury, affecting speaking, understanding, reading and/or writing.
· Hoarseness or Strained Voice: Raspy, breathy, strained or unreliable voice; can relate to vocal load, inflammation, reflux, or vocal fold changes.
· Vocal Cord Paralysis: One or both vocal folds do not move normally, impacting voice, breathing and/or swallowing.
· Resonance Disorders: Speech that sounds overly nasal or “blocked”; may be structural, neuromuscular, and/or learned.
· Gender Affirming Voice and Speech Therapy: Support to align voice and communication with gender identity using safe, evidence-based voice techniques.
· Psychogenic Voice Disorders and Conversion Disorder: Voice changes linked to psychological factors; therapy supports voice recovery and functional communication.
· Stuttering: Disruptions to speech flow (repetitions, prolongations, blocks) that can impact confidence and participation.
· Cluttering: Fast or irregular speech rate that can reduce clarity and organisation of spoken messages.
· Pragmatic Language Disorder: Support for conversation skills, turn-taking, topic maintenance, inference, and interpreting non-verbal cues.
· Dysphagia (Swallowing Disorders): Assessment and strategies to support safe swallowing and reduce aspiration risk (often alongside GP/ENT/medical teams when needed).
· Hearing Impairments: Therapy to support listening, speech clarity, language development, and communication strategies in partnership with audiology where required.
· Speech Therapy for Neurological Conditions: Communication and swallowing rehabilitation for stroke, TBI, Parkinson’s disease, MS, dementia and other neurological conditions.
· Phonological Awareness: Therapy targeting sound awareness skills that underpin reading/spelling (rhyming, blending, segmenting, manipulation).
· Post‑Surgical Rehabilitation for Laryngectomy and Head and Neck Cancer: Multidisciplinary support for communication, swallowing and function after surgery/treatment (in shared care with your treating team).
We support children, adults and older adults with disability, injury, chronic conditions, developmental concerns, communication needs, mobility challenges and rehabilitation goals.
Feeding & Swallowing assessments and plans may help:
Children with feeding challenges, sensory-based preferences, limited food range, or mealtime distress
Adults with swallowing difficulties (dysphagia), neurological conditions, or post-illness deconditioning
Older adults experiencing coughing/choking risk, fatigue, reduced appetite, or swallowing changes
People with disability who need consistent, safe mealtime strategies across settings
We welcome a range of funding pathways and can help you understand the best option for your situation.
We see clients using:
Private (self-funded)
NDIS (self-managed and plan-managed)
Aged Care / Home Care Packages
Medicare (where eligible, with a GP referral)
DVA (eligible veterans)
Other funding pathways (e.g., insurers or schemes, where applicable)
Where clinically appropriate, we can provide supporting documentation to inform service planning and care coordination.
Speech therapy, also known as speech pathology, is an allied health service that supports people with difficulties related to communication, speech, language, social interaction, voice, fluency, feeding and swallowing. Speech therapy can help children and adults develop skills, improve function, and participate more confidently in everyday life.
A speech therapist, or speech pathologist, may help with:
speech clarity and pronunciation
language development and understanding
communication skills
stuttering and fluency
voice problems
feeding and swallowing difficulties
cognitive-communication concerns
communication support for people with disability or developmental delays
The type of support provided depends on the individual’s needs, goals and age.
Speech therapy may be helpful for:
babies and young children with delayed speech or language development
school-aged children with communication or learning-related language difficulties
adults with communication or swallowing changes after illness, injury or neurological conditions
people with disability who need support with communication, feeding or participation
older adults experiencing voice, swallowing or cognitive-communication changes
Yes. At Palms Physiotherapy & Allied Health, we provide speech therapy support for children, adults and older adults, depending on their individual needs and goals.
Speech refers to how sounds are produced and how clearly a person speaks. Language refers to understanding and using words, sentences and meaning to communicate. A person may have difficulty with speech, language, or both.
Yes. Speech therapy may help children who are late to start talking, have delayed language development, or are having difficulty understanding or using language compared with what is expected for their age.
Speech therapy may support autistic children and adults with areas such as communication, social interaction, language development, emotional expression, and participation in daily life. Therapy should always be tailored to the individual and their communication style.
Yes. Speech pathologists also assess and manage feeding and swallowing difficulties, sometimes called dysphagia. Support may include assessment, practical strategies, education, and recommendations to support safer and more effective eating and drinking where appropriate.
Dysphagia means difficulty swallowing. It can affect eating, drinking, swallowing medication, or managing saliva. Speech pathologists are the allied health professionals who assess and help manage swallowing concerns.
A speech therapy appointment may include:
discussion of concerns and goals
assessment of communication, speech, language, voice, feeding or swallowing
observation of how the person communicates or functions
therapy activities tailored to the individual
practical strategies for home, school, work or daily life
education for parents, carers or support workers where appropriate
The exact structure of the appointment depends on the person’s needs.
For many children, parent or carer involvement is very helpful and may be encouraged as part of therapy. For adults, family or support workers may also be involved where appropriate and with the person’s consent.
This depends on the person’s needs, goals, age, presentation and how often therapy is recommended. Some people may need short-term support, while others may benefit from ongoing therapy over a longer period.
You can adjust this question depending on your actual service model, but a good generic version is:
We offer Speech Therapy services in clinic, and in some cases mobile or alternative service options may also be available depending on the person’s needs, location and the type of support required.
Speech therapy may be available for NDIS participants where the support is relevant to their disability-related goals and plan funding. Final funding decisions rest with the NDIA, and service availability may depend on plan management type and provider arrangements.
Some clients may be eligible to access speech therapy through Medicare with the appropriate referral pathway, such as a GP chronic condition management plan, depending on eligibility and Medicare requirements.
Some speech therapy services may be claimable through private health insurance, depending on your level of cover and your insurer’s rules. It is best to check directly with your fund.
Yes. Where appropriate, speech pathologists may work collaboratively with other members of the person’s support team, such as occupational therapists, physiotherapists, exercise physiologists, GPs, paediatricians, teachers, support workers and family members.
If you are concerned about your child’s speech, language, communication, feeding or swallowing, it can be helpful to seek an assessment. Early assessment can help clarify whether support may be useful and what next steps are appropriate.
Not always. Some clients attend privately without a referral, while others may come via Medicare, NDIS, DVA, aged care or other funding pathways that have their own requirements.
Find the right support by discipline, including physiotherapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, exercise physiology and other allied health services.
At Palms Physiotherapy & Allied Health, our experienced team is here to help children and adults manage their condition and improve their quality of life.
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If you’re unsure which facility, service, or technology is the right fit, our team can guide you based on your goals and presentation.
Speech Pathology Australia
https://www.speechpathologyaustralia.org.au
The national peak body for speech pathologists in Australia, providing information for the public on speech therapy services and professional standards.
Raising Children Network
https://raisingchildren.net.au
Resources for parents and carers about child development, including communication milestones and when to seek speech therapy for children.
National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS)
https://www.ndis.gov.au
Information on how to access speech therapy services for NDIS participants.
Better Health Channel (Victoria)
https://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au
Provides detailed information on communication disorders and the role of speech therapy in managing these conditions.
Australian Aphasia Association
https://www.aphasia.org.au
Support and resources for individuals living with aphasia, a communication disorder often resulting from stroke or brain injury.
Note: This page is general information only and does not replace medical advice. If you have urgent swallowing concerns, seek medical review.