“…Research has demonstrated that synchronous telepractice methods produce similar clinical outcomes when compared with in-person speech-language pathology services for neurogenic communication disorders, fluency disorders, voice disorders, dysphagia, and childhood speech and language disorders (Hill & Theodoros, 2002; Lowe, O’Brian, & Onslow, 2013; Mashima & Brown, 2011; Mashima & Doarn, 2008; Swanepoel & Hall, 2011; Theodoros, 2008). In addition to positive clinical outcomes that mirror those of in-person services, client and clinician satisfaction have been remarkably positive across the majority of studies (Brennan, 2006; Brennan, Georgeadis, & Baron, 2002; Georgeadis, Brennan, Barker, & Baron, 2004; Kully, 2002; Mashima et al, 2003), a finding consistent with other areas of telehealth research (Cardoso & Steinberg, 2010). …”