PURPOSE OF THIS POSITION
The purpose of this position is to provide for patient evaluation and the application of a wide variety of therapeutic techniques for the rehabilitation of patients with speech and language disorders, hearing disorders and oral motor disorders.
JOB DUTIES/RESPONSIBILITIES
REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS
PHYSICAL DEMANDS
General:
Occasionally pushes patients in wheelchairs (100-350 lbs.) into and out of treatment areas and adjusts patient’s position for table or computer access. Also assists patients to adjust extremities or re-position upper body in chair. Frequently travels to patient’s homes to provide Home Health speech therapy. Frequently travels within building to locate patients on units, treat patients in other clinical areas, or to assist in patient transport. Frequently transports patient folders, treatment materials and office supplies (1-5 lbs.). Frequently pushes/pulls file and storage cabinet drawers to retrieve and return materials. Frequently changes body position from sit-stand or stand-sit during treatment, documentation, general office activities. Occasionally provides steadying or light assistance to ambulatory patients for standing or walking within the department or in hallways. Occasionally lifts/adjusts patient seated in wheelchair with or without assistance.
Fine Motor Coordination:
Frequently writes or keyboards to document patient care or to demonstrate or assist patient during treatment; frequently assists patients in computer treatment activities, occasionally may enter charges or other departmental administrative data. Frequently uses fine motor skills during dysphagia evaluation and treatment (e.g., resistance exercises, thermal gustatory stimulation, palpation of muscle function, or deep muscle massage.
Verbal Expression:
Frequently presents treatment stimuli verbally for speech, language, voice, and cognitive evaluation and treatment tasks, provides verbal model for remediation of patient speech production. Presents information verbally to other professionals in formal and informal meetings, case staffing, and in telephone consultations.
Hearing:
Relies upon hearing to discern speech and voice impairments, and to determine adequacy of spoken language and cognitive responses during evaluation and treatment activities. Hearing also involved in receiving verbal information from other professionals.
Vision:
Frequently observes patient visually to assess orofacial movements, adequacy of gestures, other pragmatic aspects, and written language. Frequently must read literature, reports and other written materials from other professionals, and CIS and billing computer terminals.
Environmental Factors:
The practice of medical speech pathology involves occasional risk of infection (e.g., MRSA, hepatitis, other blood borne pathogens) which requires to the use of safety precautions such as surgical masks, gowns, gloves and special hand-washing procedures. Materials and treatment surfaces may also require special handling.
This position is classified “at risk” for possible occupational exposure to blood borne pathogens (HBV, HIV, etc.)