Communication Strategies in PPA/PPAOS

People living with primary progressive aphasia (PPA) often need new ways to help with talking, understanding, reading, or writing. These are called communication strategies. A speech-language therapist will help you and your care partner choose strategies that work for you. These tools can help you stay connected to others, even as things change over time.

 

Personalized Communication Therapies

These are practice activities based on things that matter to you. They can help you keep words longer and say them more easily.

  • Script training – Practice saying short, everyday sentences like “I’ll have a coffee, please.” or stories you like to tell.
  • Speech entrainment – Watch and speak at the same time as a video of someone else.
  • Lexical cascade – A step-by-step way to find and say a word (like thinking about what it means, or writing or saying the first letter).
  • CART – Write a word while looking at it, then write it again from memory. This helps with spelling and remembering words.

Learn more about speech-language therapies for PPA 

Care Partner and Close Others Training

Your care partner is someone close to you who helps with daily life. Close others are people you see or talk with regularly. A speech-language therapist will help them learn how to:

  • Give extra time for talking
  • Use yes/no questions or give choices
  • Support communication without taking over
  • Notice when you need help and respond kindly

They may learn in sessions with you or in a group with other care partners.

Environment Changes

This means changing the space around you to make talking easier.

  • Turn off the TV or music when talking
  • Sit face-to-face during conversation
  • Add written notes or labels to common items
  • Use pictures or lists to support daily routines

Reading and Writing Strategies

Strategies you can use to help with reading and writing:

  • Keep a list of helpful words to use when writing or texting
  • Use cue cards to help remember how to spell important words
  • Write or type what you want to say when speech is hard
  • Label objects around the house to support word finding, and remember how to spell words

Real-Life Examples

Here are some ways people use these strategies every day:

  • Practice a short script to use at a favorite café
  • Use a photo app to share a memory with family
  • Point to a menu picture to order a meal
  • Text a saved message like “Please wait—I need a moment.”
  • Use a notebook to tell a story or share news
  • Show an “awareness card” in a new place to explain you have PPA