Love This App Very Useful Perfect So Easy to Use Great for my patients See why thousands of users around the world are raving about this app People with memory impairments can become worried when they dont remember where they are or other important information. They may be unsafe when they forget to use a walker or apply the wheelchair breaks before standing. This app is not intended to be used alone by the memory-impaired person, but as a therapy tool by a clinician or family member trained in this technique.
Designed for people with aphasia, an impairment in the ability to use language, SmallTalk Aphasia provides a vocabulary of pictures and videos that talk in a natural human voice. SmallTalk Aphasia contains a starter set of icons to introduce you to the Lingraphica communication system. SmallTalk Letters, Numbers, Colors: Speech-exercise videos for the alphabet, numbers 120, and primary colors.
Excellent visual tool to aid professionals in educating patients and families about swallowing disorders. This app features state-of-the-art animations derived from MBSImP research on swallowing physiology and impairment. Available for iPhone and iPad.
Our goal is to help people catch the early signs of dementia. The eSLUMS app was developed using the clinically validated instrument - the Saint Louis University Mental Status (SLUMS) Exam created by Dr. Theodore K. Malmstrom and Dr. John Morley from the Saint Louis University School of Medicine. Chewy Logic, LLC assumes no responsibility or consulting on how you may use the testing results.
Designed for people with dysphagia, an impairment of the ability to swallow, SmallTalk Dysphagia provides a vocabulary of pictures and icons that talk in a natural human voice. SmallTalk Dysphagia contains 50 phrases that cover eating equipment, meal assistance, diet, liquids, medications, and compensatory treatment techniques. SmallTalk Letters, Numbers, Colors: Speech-exercise videos for the alphabet, numbers 120, and primary colors.
The SmallTalk Days, Months, Dates app provides a series of speech-exercise videos, each illustrating the tongue and lip movements necessary to produce the days of the week, months of the year, and ordinal numbers 1st through 31st. These articulation videos allow people with apraxia, aphasia, and/or dysarthria resulting from stroke or head injury to easily practice time-related phrases as often as they like. Lois Jean Brady, Speech-Language Pathologist (US)