August 18, 2009

By Erica Ronchetti

For physical therapists and occupational therapists, there are many travel therapy jobs that allow these healthcare professionals opportunities to explore the nation, combining a successful career with their love of travel.  This is the case for Speech Language Pathologists (also known as speech therapists) as well.  As SLP careers become more popular, SLP jobs are becoming more commonplace and traveling SLPs are in high demand.  Facilities need to staff qualified speech therapists to fill short term staffing gaps, a perfect opportunity for non-local speech language pathologists to combine their entrepreneurial spirit with love of travel and advance in their careers.

Many companies specialize in connecting speech therapists looking for work with the hospitals and facilities that are looking to hire SLP professionals on a short term basis, taking into account therapist preferences and needs.  A typical SLP travel job would last for approximately 13 weeks, with the therapist in control of where they work for the duration of the assignment.  Typical travel speech language pathologist salaries are very competitive and usually housing and meals are paid for as well.  There is often a myth about lack of insurance or benefits, but that is untrue.  Along with insurance, frequently therapists may receive bonuses on completion of their SLP travel job.

Some people are required to travel as part of their job, and this can often be somewhat of an inconvenience.  Many speech therapy professionals feel the opposite way, and don’t just take on travel speech therapy jobs for the salary and benefits.  Their love for travel and the opportunity to see the country and explore different cities and cultures is a main motivation for pursuing a career in travel therapy.  If you think a traveling speech therapy job is right for you, don’t hesitate to find out more information by visiting http://www.alliedtravelcareers.com/speechtherapyjobs.php and apply now to get in touch with a recruiter today.  Learn how a SLP travel job can advance your career!

Erica Ronchetti is Account Manager for Travel Nurse Source, a recruiting company for traveling nurses.  Travel Nurse Source is affiliated with Allied Travel Careers, a recruiting company for traveling physical therapists, occupational therapists, and speech language pathologists.  For more information on what we do, please visit our websites.

No Comments | Tags: Allied Travel Jobs, Speech/Language Pathology

July 6, 2009

By Christine Whitmarsh, RN, BSN

There is a big demand for speech language pathologists and speech therapists in the schools to work with children diagnosed with developmental disorders such as Autism (where increased funding is being sought in state after state), with cognitive disorders, and articulation and language impairments. Traveling speech language pathologists and travel speech therapists are also encouraged to seek out these positions in schools.

While educators work to fill these open positions, speech-language pathologists at Kent State University in Ohio are working on an alternate solution to the conventional face-to-face, one-on-one SLP approach. They have started using a method of SLP practice called “telepractice” in various rural schools, as a way of delivering speech and language therapy remotely to students in need. For the pilot program, the students treated experienced articulation, phonological and language impairments. Similar to conventional SLP, the sessions went according to the child’s existing education plan. The difference was that the sessions were conducted between the SLP and child via a website, computer program and special software with an “e-helper” onsite to assist the child (not from a therapy standpoint).  The Kent State SLP’s who conducted the study reported that one disadvantage they noted was reduced communication between the speech-language pathologist and the classroom teacher. They are currently reviewing results, comparing conventional to “telepractice” SLP and planning future studies.

There are similar telepractice and telemedicine program in various other disciplines in other states as well. Travel speech language pathologists and traveling speech therapists may not have immediate access to these types of technological advances in therapy yet. But, there are still numerous opportunities and slp travel jobs to work directly with children in schools who need speech therapy.

Source: Advance for Speech-Language Pathologists & Audiologists

Christine Whitmarsh is a Registered Nurse with a BSN from the University of Rhode Island. She is a freelance health journalist and medical writer and a contributor to Travel Nurse Source and Allied Travel Careers.

1 Comment | Tags: Allied Travel Jobs, Speech/Language Pathology

June 16, 2009

By Christine Whitmarsh, RN, BSN

Traveling therapists such as travel speech therapists, travel speech language pathologists, and slp travel jobs seekers in these fields, are responsible for much more than what most people would associate with “speech.” SLP’s work with patients rehabilitating from a stroke and others with swallowing difficulties. Speech therapists also work intensively in one-on-one scenarios helping improve outcomes for autistic children. They are involved in many other treatment situations that involve any of the parts of the upper airway and mouth related to speech. One of the patient groups speech therapists work with is a group that I happen to be quite familiar with: snorers. I grew up adjacent to a symphony of snores coming from my parents’ room and now I am the conductor of my own personal symphony lying in the bed next to me.

Most cases of snoring are mild or non-threatening enough that over the counter and home remedies are enough to manage the situation.  For many Americans, however, the problem or snoring is connected to “obstructive sleep apnea,” a disorder that, if left untreated, puts some individuals at risk for heart attack and stroke due to a lack of oxygen flow during sleep. Speech therapists regularly work with sleep apnea patients, teaching them upper airway exercises that help diminish symptoms and increase the individual’s overall well-being.

The American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine’s May 15th issue reported the results of a randomized sleep apnea study, during which some participants were assigned actual speech therapy upper airway exercises while others were given “fake” treatment regimens. The study showed that those who participated in the actual speech therapy exercises experienced improved sleep quality. This study and similar research shows the immense value of speech therapists and traveling speech therapists in working with patients across a broad range of illnesses and conditions.

Christine Whitmarsh is a Registered Nurse with a BSN from the University of Rhode Island. She is a freelance health journalist and medical writer and a contributor to Travel Nurse Source and Allied Travel Careers.

1 Comment | Tags: Allied Travel Jobs, Speech/Language Pathology

March 2, 2009

By Christine Whitmarsh, RN, BSN

Speech therapists and speech language pathologists often have the very special privilege of working with children born with genetic disorders and to establish or restore speaking and swallowing ability that these children wouldn’t have otherwise. Conditions that may call for a speech therapist may include autism, Down Syndrome, cerebral palsy and cleft lip and palate. While the last condition is sometimes associated with children born outside of the United States, those children are often brought by charitable organizations, to medical clinics and surgeons here in the states for reconstructive surgeries. As this trend grows so should the need for travel speech therapists and traveling speech pathologists to travel to these locations and work with these children.

Cleft lip and/or cleft palate affects 1 in every 700 babies annually, here in the U.S. and abroad. It is the fourth most common birth defect in the U.S. but more frequently occurs in children of Asian, Latino and Native American descent.* Speech pathologists are called upon to work with these children because the condition results in the voice taking on a nasal quality and becoming very difficult to understand.

Speech therapists on staff as well as those in travel speech pathology jobs are also called upon to help children with autism to find their voice. Autistic children generally run the gamut from being either non-verbal or extremely verbal, with a tendency to misinterpret language called Asperger Syndrome falling in between. Speech language pathologists are vital members of the care team, who can help children with autism learn to communicate non-verbally, in basic spoken phrases and sometimes with full conversational skills.

There are many opportunities for professionals working in speech therapy to embark on a speech pathologist travel assignment or traveling speech therapist career, to seek out the children who most need their help. In an upcoming blog, I will be speaking to the mother of an autistic child who has extensive experience working with all types of rehabilitation therapists: physical therapists, occupational therapists and speech therapists. It will be very interesting to learn which qualities, in her opinion as the caregiver on the “front lines” of her son’s care, make a good rehabilitation therapist. Stay tuned!

*Webmd.com

Christine Whitmarsh is a Registered Nurse with a BSN from the University of Rhode Island. She is a freelance health journalist and medical writer and a contributor to Travel Nurse Source and Allied Travel Careers.

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