Voice therapy addresses disorders affecting the quality, pitch, loudness, or flexibility of the voice. Conditions include vocal nodules, polyps, muscle tension dysphonia, vocal cord paralysis, and voice changes due to aging or hormonal factors. Our licensed SLPs use evidence-based vocal rehabilitation techniques to help you regain a healthy, functional voice.
1Common Voice Disorders
Voice disorders range from functional issues like muscle tension dysphonia (caused by vocal misuse) to organic conditions such as vocal nodules, polyps, and cysts. Other conditions include spasmodic dysphonia, vocal cord paralysis, puberphonia, and gender-affirming voice therapy needs. Symptoms include hoarseness, breathiness, vocal fatigue, pitch changes, and difficulty projecting.
2Who Needs Voice Therapy?
Voice therapy benefits teachers, call center professionals, public speakers, singers, and anyone whose work depends on their voice. It also helps individuals recovering from laryngeal surgery, those with neurological voice disorders, transgender and non-binary individuals seeking voice modification, and children with voice problems.
3Our Therapeutic Approach
We use techniques including vocal function exercises (VFE), resonant voice therapy, Lee Silverman Voice Treatment (LSVT), and Lessac-Madsen Resonant Voice Therapy. Treatment is individualized based on a thorough voice evaluation. Sessions include real-time acoustic feedback, guided exercises, and home practice programs.
4Online Voice Therapy Effectiveness
Research supports telepractice for voice therapy, with studies showing equivalent outcomes to in-person sessions. Our secure video platform provides high-quality audio essential for voice assessment and therapy. Sessions are typically 30–45 minutes, with most clients noticing improvement within 6–10 sessions.