Symptom Care and Support
A diagnosis of ALS can be overwhelming. We're here to make sure you have all the facts to better understand and navigate the disease. Discuss any of the topics below or additional questions, reach out to your Care Coordinator or email careservices@alsaco.org.

Your ability to communicate at all times is vital and must be maintained even when speech alone is not sufficient. Augmentative Alternative Communication (AAC) tools and strategies are available to help. Three primary AAC tools are:
- Speech Generating Devices or Text-To-Speech Apps
- Low-Tech or Rapid Access Communication Methods
- Alternative Access Methods
A speech therapist specializing in AAC will help you review options, trial equipment, and tailor a customized and comprehensive solution for you. Please talk with your ALS clinic team, or ask your care manager for more information.
Prior to or at the First Sign of Speech Change
First, have a speech therapist measure your speech rate. This is an important baseline number that assists in determining timing for interventions.
Second, begin Message and Voice Banking so that your own voice can be used in a speech generating device (SGD) or text-to-speech (TTS) app if ever required.
- Message Banking is a process of recording phrases and expressions that are meaningful to you and those you love. Recording words of affection, your own quintessential expressions, and phrases that you often repeat, like greetings, are especially important. Banked messages preserve your cadence and unique delivery of each expression. Examples of phrases I often recommend include, “How are you doing?”, “It’s great to see you.”, “I use this device to speak but my thinking and hearing are fine. Please speak directly to me.”, “Give me a break.”, “Thanks for everything!”, “Hold on! I want to add something.” Speech therapists can assist you with lists of popular messages, but the best phrase ideas often come from the people who know you best.
- Voice Banking process creates a custom synthesized voice for you based on samples of your speech. There are different programs for Voice Banking that range in cost, time expenditure, and clarity of speech required.
Your speech therapist can make recommendations for Message and Voice Banking programs and apps. Scheduling an appointment or two with a speech therapist to provide assistance with Message and Voice banking can be a great way to get started.
When Changes in Speech Begin Causing Challenges in Communication
At the point when speech changes can be readily detected, it is vital that you meet with a speech therapist. The therapist will document your speech rate and listen to your speech characteristics. Together, you and your speech therapist will choose the best strategies to help you and those around you enjoy improved and less frustrating communication. Oral motor exercises are not recommended for speech changes resulting from ALS but there are many strategies that can help including the following:
- Consider customizing your own list of helpful communication strategies to share with frequent communication partners. It can be distributed directly, via emails or through social media. Don’t forget to explain your energy conservation needs, including preferred communication times for calls and limits for visits.
A speech therapist will have other strategies to help with challenges like phone communication, emergency alerting systems for times when you are home alone, and tools for signaling to others within the home if you have a need.
At the point when speech is beginning to require repetitions or your speech rate slows significantly a speech therapist will often recommend an evaluation for Augmentative Alternative Communication (AAC). A proactive approach to AAC involves obtaining and customizing the components of a complete AAC system prior to a time when you may need to rely on it for communication.
Consider customizing your own list of helpful communication strategies to share with frequent communication partners. It can be distributed directly, via emails or through social media. Don’t forget to explain your energy conservation needs, including preferred communication times for calls and limits for visits.
A speech therapist will have other strategies to help with challenges like phone communication, emergency alerting systems for times when you are home alone, and tools for signaling to others within the home if you have a need.
At the point when speech is beginning to require repetitions or your speech rate slows significantly a speech therapist will often recommend an evaluation for Augmentative Alternative Communication (AAC). A proactive approach to AAC involves obtaining and customizing the components of a complete AAC system prior to a time when you may need to rely on it for communication.
When Speech Doesn’t Meet All Communication Needs
Adapted from the ALS Functional Communication Scale, Roman 2014
ALS leads to speech problems when it attacks bulbar neurons. These are the nerve cells responsible for bringing messages from the lower parts of the brain (bulbar region) to the muscles that move the lips, tongue, soft palate (back of roof of mouth), jaw, and vocal folds (voice box). As nerves are lost to the disease, the muscles they control become weak and tight. This causes dysarthria – the term used to describe slow, effortful, slurred speech, and breathy or hoarse voice. Weakening lung muscles affect speech as well. Speaking may make you tired, especially later in the day. You may find yourself speaking in shorter sentences and that projecting your voice is difficult.
There is an important distinction between the dysarthria associated with ALS and the dysarthrias resulting from other conditions like a stroke. In ALS the muscles that are receiving signals from the brain must compensate for the muscles that are already weak. This means the functional muscles are doing extra work all the time to compensate and therefore, require more frequent and extended rest. In fact, rest can often help temporarily improve speech. Therapeutic oral exercises designed to strengthen muscles for people with other forms of dysarthria have not been demonstrated to improve speech for people with ALS. The movements required for speaking provide ample exercise. Stretch and massage may be recommended to reduce tightness or maintain range of movement.
Partnering with your Speech Therapist
Beginning work with a speech therapist (i.e. speech language pathologist or SLP) familiar with ALS at the earliest sign of speech or voice changes, and even prior to changes occurring, can be invaluable. As your abilities change, your speech therapist can help you to maintain or improve your communication. A speech therapist will make sure you have the tools and training to achieve each of these seven vital communication competencies throughout the progression of ALS. I can alert people in other rooms or outside the home when I have a need or emergency.
- I can use strategies that improve communication speed, success, and reduce fatigue (whether using speech or AAC).
- I can use a low-tech or rapid access communication system.
- I can produce voiced messages via speech, SGD, or TTS app.
- I can communicate with people not in my immediate environment (email, text, phone, social media, etc.)
- My communication partners and I can independently set up, customize, and use all of the elements of my communication system.
- I can describe a proactive strategy designed to prepare for typical changes in speech and/or computer access that I may experience.
It is essential though that you understand the abilities you can expect to maintain, and alert your therapist when updates in your system are needed.
Adapted from the ALS Functional Communication Scale, Roman 2014
While good nutrition is important for everyone, it can be very challenging for people living with ALS to maintain a healthy diet due to chewing and swallowing difficulties often experienced at some point in the disease progression. Improper nutrition can cause people to feel tired, lower their resistance to infection, speed the loss of muscle mass, cause constipation and lead to a host of other health problems.
A nutritionist or speech therapist can help people living with ALS and their caregivers put together a healthy diet that works to meet each person’s specific needs. In general, though, when supplied with the right education and information, planning and preparing healthy meals the whole family will enjoy can be easy and stress free.
Below are some important facts to know and tips on maintaining good nutrition despite having ALS.
- Protein provides the building blocks for muscle and many other tissues in your body.
Excluding water, about three-quarters of our body’s solid mass is made up of protein. If you don’t consume enough protein, your body may break down muscle tissue to supply the quantity it needs. While protein is very important for people living with ALS, it can be difficult to consume the necessary amount. Meat, including beef, poultry and fish, eggs, beans, nuts, milk and cheese are all-natural sources of protein.
- Fiber can help you maintain a healthy weight and improve your digestive health.
Fruits, vegetables, whole-grain breads, and cereals are all good sources of fiber. Unfortunately, fibrous foods can also be hard for some people living with ALS to swallow. To make sure you’re getting enough fiber in your diet, consider eating fruits or vegetables with a soft consistency, such as bananas, canned peaches or cooked beans or applesauce and other fruits that have been pureed.
- Most people need a half-gallon of water each day, or eight 8-ounce cups of liquid.
Dehydration can be another problem for people with swallowing difficulties, and getting enough water is every bit as important as getting enough food. If you’re having trouble swallowing liquids, you can get the water you need by drinking thick liquids or adding thickening powder to your favorite beverages. Eating food with a high-water content, such as canned fruits or pudding can also be a big help for people living with ALS. People with mobility challenges may limit their liquid intake to decrease trips to the bathroom. Strategies and equipment for easier transfers and independence are available.
- Getting enough calories daily is critical for people living with ALS.
Getting enough calories to maintain a healthy weight can be challenging for people living with ALS. Though many people think it’s healthy to diet or limit fat intake, for people living with ALS it’s much more important to make sure you’re getting enough calories to fuel your body and prevent it from breaking down muscle tissue. If you quickly feel full or grow tired when eating, try having six to eight small meals each day instead of three large ones. You may also consider a feeding tube to supplement your calorie intake throughout the day.
- Vitamins and minerals help boost the immune system, support normal growth and development, and help cells and organs do their jobs.
While there’s not yet clear evidence that vitamin supplements can help the body fight ALS, it’s been suggested that vitamin E may be beneficial to people living with ALS, but the evidence is inconclusive. However, it’s still a good idea to consider taking a daily multivitamin and perhaps an additional vitamin E supplement. Some vitamins come in either solid or liquid form, so you can choose whichever is easiest for you to consume.
Additional information regarding maintaining good nutrition while living with ALS can be obtained from your physician, dietitian or ALS health care team.
Receiving an ALS diagnosis can be overwhelming, accompanied by a long list of tasks to handle. At some stage, the majority of families living iwth ALS find themselves in need of home care services. However, the costs linked to such care can accumulate rapidly. While public insurance programs like Medicare and Medicaid, as well as private insurance, may offer partial coverage for medically based home healthcare, the primary financial responsibility typically falls on the family for the day-to-day assistance.
Home Care (Non-medical)
What do they do?
Home care services are supportive services that can be arranged for any amount of time needed, up to 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. They can be used on a regular schedule or on a temporary basis for respite.
They can include:
- Bathing and dressing assistance
- Toileting assistance
- Transfer and ambulation assistance
- Medication reminders
- Nutrition management
- Light housekeeping
- Laundry and lines assistance
- Transportation to appointments and errands
- Companionship
- Peace of mind and safety
Who pays?
Home Care is usually paid for out–of-pocket. Some long-term care insurance policies will cover home care, but it is not a benefit of Medicare or most private health insurance plans. Medicaid does have a benefit for home care that you can apply for if you qualify. Veteran’s programs also cover home care.
Home Health Care (Medical)
What do they do?
Home health services are skilled services provided on an intermittent basis, with scheduled home visits to homebound clients only, under a plan of treatment ordered by a physician. You must have a skilled need (i.e. need a nurse) to qualify. Services can include:
- Nursing Care
- Occupational Therapy
- Physical Therapy
- Speech Therapy
- Respiratory Therapy
- Medical Social Worker
- Following a specific plan of care, and under the supervision of a skilled discipline such as a nurse or a therapist, a certified home health aide may provide personal care for a limited time.
Who pays?
Home health care services are covered by Medicare, Medicaid and private insurance.
Understanding Palliative Care
Palliative Care is a specialized medicine focusing on symptom management with people who have a terminal or chronic illness. Palliative care is available to a person at any stage of an illness, like ALS, when symptoms require more regular intervention than a typical doctor’s appointment. Symptoms managed may be pain, anxiety, shortness of breath, fatigue, constipation, nausea and any symptom causing distress. This specific type of care is available at someone’s home where the team comes to the patient. The philosophy allows for symptoms to be managed at home, with the care and recommendations being available without having to leave the home. This can provide security of knowing a medical professional is available for evaluation and management of that person’s medical condition. The team explores your goals for care, helping you and your medical team understand your wishes to improve your quality of life.
Palliative care is different than hospice care. While on palliative care a person my still access all medical treatments they wish while when on hospice care, the focus is on comfort and certain medical treatments are not pursued.
Palliative Care Goals:
- Optimize Symptom Control
- Enhance quality of life for the patient and family
- Optimize functional status when appropriate
- Help with challenging care decisions
- Educate patients and families to promote understanding of disease process and expected further course of the illness
- Promote a system of care the fosters timely access to Palliative Care Services
Questions to consider when contemplating Palliative Care:
- What kind of training does the Palliative Care staff have?
- Is there a cost involved for me?
- How often will I get visits and/or contact?
- How do you communicate with my other providers?
Palliative Care should be considered when you or a family member have:
- Recommendation from physician
- Have a serious or life limiting illness
- Progressively declining health
- Frequent hospitalizations
- Decreased ability to perform regular activities of daily living
Palliative Care |
Hospice Care |
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Definition |
An interdisciplinary consult service which focuses on providing care for patients with serious illness. Services can be provided at the same time as curative/life-prolonging care if desired. |
An interdisciplinary approach to providing care for patients at the end of life that focus on pain and symptom management. Comfort is the primary goal |
Eligibility |
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Goals of Care |
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Scope of services |
Interdisciplinary team includes a nurse practitioner, social work, and care coordinator. The nurse practitioner makes visits according to their assessment. A social worker is available and a care coordinator offers telephone support as needed. All care is coordinated with the patient’s regular doctor. |
Interdisciplinary team including doctor, nurse, nurse aide, social worker, chaplain, and volunteers. The patient’s regular doctor can continue as the hospice doctor. The nurse makes visits at least weekly. There is the availability of an on-call nurse 24 hours a day for crisis. Bereavement support is available to family for 13 months after the death. |
Location Services provided |
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Payer Source |
As with any consult service3, insurance will be billed the physician’s services. Medicare Part B will pay 80% of these charges; the remainder is billed to either a secondary insurance or to the patient. |
Patients elect their hospice Medicare/insurance benefit; the majority of hospice services are paid at 100%, including medical equipment and some medications. There may be out of pocket expenses for room and board charges the a facility. |
Restrictions |
No restrictions, patients may continue to receive curative/life-prolonging treatment. |
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