Speech therapy helps people who struggle to speak, understand, or swallow after stroke,Braininjury, or neurological problems. In this guide, we’ll walk you through how it works in real life, what happens in a session, and how it supports recovery for both children and adults.
When speech affects, everything changes. A person who once spoke freely may suddenly struggle to say a word. Someone who loved long chats may now avoid even short conversations. Sometimes, even swallowing a sip of water feels unsafe.
For many families, this happens after a stroke, brain injury, or neurological disorder. For some children, speech never developed the way everyone expected. That’s usually the moment someone says, “Maybe we should try speech therapy in kolkata.”
At Rehabana Neuro Rehab Center, Kolkata, speech therapy is not about repeating random words in a room. It is about helping people communicate again in the real world at home, at work, with family, on the phone, at the dining table.
What Is Speech Therapy, Really?
Speech therapy is a form of rehabilitation that focuses on three main things:
- How you say things
- How you understand things
- How you swallow safely
A speech therapist (also called a speech-language therapist) works on:
- Speech clarity – so words are easier to understand
- Language – words, sentences, stories, daily conversation
- Voice – loudness, quality, fatigue
- Fluency – stammering, blocks, repetitions
- Swallowing – chewing, moving food, swallowing without choking
You can think of it as coaching for the mouth, tongue, voice, brain and swallowing muscles, all at once.
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Who Usually Needs Speech Therapy?
You might consider speech therapy if you notice one or more of these:
- After a stroke – speech is slurred, words don’t come, or understanding is slow.
- After a head injury or brain infection – communication feels “different” than before.
- With Parkinson’s disease, Motor Neuron Disease, other neurological issues – voice becomes softer, slower, less clear.
- In children – speech is delayed, unclear, or they don’t follow simple instructions for their age.
- In adults – long-standing hoarseness, voice strain, or swallowing problems.
In short: if speech, understanding, or swallowing is making life harder for you or your loved one, a speech therapist can probably help.
How Speech Therapy Works at a Practical Level
First Step – Assessment (No Need to Be Nervous)
The first session is usually calm and relaxed. The therapist wants to understand two things:
- What changed?
- When did you first notice the problem?
- Was there a stroke, accident, surgery, or diagnosis before that?
- When did you first notice the problem?
- How is daily life affected?
- Are you avoiding phone calls?
- Is it hard to order food, talk in groups, or express feelings?
- Is swallowing food or water scary or tiring?
- Are you avoiding phone calls?
Read more: Speech Therapy in Kolkata: Addressing Post-Operative Vocal Challenges
What the Therapist Checks
Depending on the case, the therapist may:
- Listen to your speech in normal conversation
- Ask you to repeat words or sentences
- Show pictures and ask you to name or describe them
- Check how you understand questions and stories
- Observe how you chew and swallow different textures (for swallowing issues)
This is not an exam. It’s simply a way to map where you are right now, so the rehabilitation plan isn’t a guess.

Setting Goals Together
Once the therapist understands the problem, the next part is about clear goals.
Examples:
- “Say your name and basic details clearly when someone asks.”
- “Ask for help in a full sentence.”
- “Have a 5-10 minute chat with your family without getting too tired.”
- “Eat soft food safely without coughing.”
- “Answer simple work calls or attend short meetings.”
These goals are discussed with you and your family. That way, everyone knows what we are working towards, and progress becomes visible, not vague.
Know more: Cost of Speech Therapy in Kolkata Compared to Other Cities
What Happens in a Speech Therapy Session?
Every therapist has a slightly different style, but most sessions follow a simple rhythm.
1. Warm-Up
A few minutes of:
- Breathing practice
- Light mouth, tongue or voice exercises
- Easy words or sounds
This prepares the muscles and mind, just like warming up before a walk.
2. Main Work
This part depends on your specific problem:
- For unclear speech:
Practising specific sounds, then words, then sentences. - For language issues (after stroke or brain injury):
Naming objects, describing pictures, answering questions, building sentences slowly. - For understanding problems:
Listening to short messages and responding, following step-by-step instructions. - For swallowing:
Tongue movements, posture changes, safe swallow techniques, trying different food textures. - For stammering:
Slowing down, gentle starts, breathing along with speech, removing fear around mistakes.
3. Real-Life Practice
This is where it feels less like “therapy” and more like regular life:
- Practising how to introduce yourself
- Ordering food like you would in a restaurant
- Role-playing workplace situations or phone calls
- Using phrases you actually use every day at home
4. Home Practice
At the end, the therapist gives a few short exercises for home.
These don’t need special tools often they can be done during meals, walks, or family time. This is where long-term progress really builds up.
Speech Therapy After Stroke and Brain Injury
For many families at Rehabana, the story starts with a stroke or head injury. The person survives the medical emergency, but now:
- Speech is slurred or very slow
- They can’t find the right word
- They understand only part of what is said
- They cough or choke when they try to drink or eat
In these cases, speech therapy focuses on:
- Bringing back as much speech and understanding as the brain allows
- Using backup methods gestures, writing, pictures, apps when speech is difficult
- Making eating and drinking safe and less stressful
- Helping family members learn how to talk in a way that supports recovery, not frustration
At Rehabana, this is always part of a larger neuro rehabilitation plan, along with physiotherapy and occupational therapy.
Speech Therapy for Children
In children, therapy looks and feels very different from adult sessions. It’s more play, less “clinic.”
You might think about speech therapy for a child if:
- They started talking much later than other kids
- You understand them, but outsiders don’t
- They don’t seem to follow simple instructions for their age
- They stammer or get stuck on words
How Sessions Look for Kids
- Games, puzzles, picture cards, toys
- Rhymes, stories and songs
- Turn-taking games to build communication and social skills
Parents are a big part of this. Therapists often show parents small things to do at home during meals, playtime or bedtime so the child gets practice without feeling they are “studying” all the time.
Recommended: Speech Therapy’s Role in Autism: 7 Ways It Enhances Communication in Kolkata
How Long Does Speech Therapy Take?
This is one of the most common questions. The honest answer is: it depends.
It depends on:
- What caused the problem (stroke, injury, developmental delay, neurological illness, etc.)
- How severe it is
- How early therapy was started
- How regular sessions are
- How consistently home practice is done
Some people feel a difference in a few weeks. Others, especially after serious brain events, may need months or ongoing support.
The important thing is not speed; it is steady, meaningful change in daily life being understood better, feeling safer while eating, feeling more confident to talk.
How Families Can Help
Speech therapy is not something that happens only inside the therapy room. Family support can change the whole journey.
You can help by:
- Giving extra time to respond no rushing, no pressure
- Encouraging attempts, even if the words aren’t perfect
- Keeping background noise low during important conversations
- Practising the small exercises suggested by the therapist
- Avoiding teasing, mocking or finishing sentences out of impatience
When the family becomes a part of the rehab journey, people feel hopeful instead of helpless.
A Few Myths People Often Have
Clearing Common Doubts
“Speech therapy is only for kids.”
No. Adults and older people need it too especially after stroke, brain injury, surgery or neurological conditions.
“If there is no change in one month, it’s pointless.”
Recovery in speech and language is often slow. Tiny steps matter. Stopping too early can waste the progress that is just beginning.
“They can speak a little, so therapy isn’t needed.”
They might still be struggling with understanding, longer conversations, or swallowing. Therapy also looks at safety, confidence and quality of communication, not just the number of words.
Speech Therapy at Rehabana – How We Work
At Rehabana – Neuro Rehab Center, Kolkata:
- Speech therapy is doctor-guided and part of a full rehabilitation plan
- We work closely with physiotherapists and occupational therapists, especially in stroke and neuro cases
- Each patient – child or adult gets a personalised approach based on their story, not just their test scores
- We keep the environment simple, respectful and hopeful
Our aim is not “perfect speech”.
Our aim is meaningful communication and safer swallowing, so life feels more like “life” again.