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How Care Professionals Use Memoryboard

A Practical Guide for SLPs, OTs, and Geriatric Care Managers

Discover how Memoryboard helps speech-language pathologists, occupational therapists, and care managers support clients with cognitive impairment through structured routines, visual cues, and consistent caregiver engagement.

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Headshot of Tyler Zanini, Founder at Memoryboard

Written by

Tyler Zanini, Founder at Memoryboard

Why We Wrote This for Professionals

If you’re a speech-language pathologist (SLP), occupational therapist (OT), or geriatric care manager, you’ve likely faced this gap:

You can recommend strategies…

You can coach families…

But you can’t be there every day to reinforce them.

That’s where breakdowns happen.

Families forget routines.

Instructions get simplified (or ignored).

Patients lose consistency—and with it, progress.

Memoryboard exists to bridge that gap—not by replacing your expertise, but by extending it into the home in a structured, repeatable way.

This guide walks through how professionals are using Memoryboard in real care plans, what outcomes to expect, and where it fits (and doesn’t fit).

What Is Memoryboard (in Clinical Terms)?

Memoryboard is a structured external memory support system designed for people with cognitive impairment.

It combines:

  • Daily orientation (date, time, weather)

  • Personalized prompts (medications, meals, appointments)

  • Familiar faces and names

  • Simple, consistent routines

Think of it as a care plan made visible and repeatable, without relying on recall.

Clinical Use Cases by Discipline

1) Speech-Language Pathologists (SLPs)

SLPs often focus on:

  • Cognitive-communication

  • Memory strategies

  • Orientation

  • Functional language use

Where Memoryboard fits:

External Memory Aid Training

  • Reinforces use of compensatory strategies

  • Reduces reliance on impaired recall

  • Supports spaced retrieval practice

Orientation Support

  • Consistent exposure to time, place, people

  • Reduces confusion-driven anxiety

  • Anchors daily conversations

Caregiver Carryover

  • Families often struggle to apply SLP strategies consistently

  • Memoryboard acts as a daily cueing system

Example: Instead of telling a patient “your daughter visits at 3,” the board shows it every day—same place, same format.

Observed outcomes:

  • Improved participation in conversation

  • Reduced repetitive questioning

  • Better retention of daily structure

2) Occupational Therapists (OTs)

OTs focus on:

  • ADLs (activities of daily living)

  • Habit formation

  • Environmental modification

  • Independence and safety

Where Memoryboard fits:

Routine Building

  • Visual sequencing of daily tasks

  • Reinforces morning/evening routines

  • Supports habit loops

Environmental Cueing

Task Initiation

  • Prompts action without caregiver intervention

  • Especially helpful in early–mid stage dementia

Example: Instead of verbal reminders:

  • “Take your medication”

  • “Eat lunch”

The board provides passive, persistent prompts.

Observed outcomes:

  • Increased independence in simple routines

  • Reduced caregiver prompting frequency

  • Smoother transitions between activities

3) Geriatric Care Managers

Care managers coordinate:

  • Family communication

  • Care plans

  • In-home support

  • Transitions (home → assisted living)

Where Memoryboard fits:

Alignment Tool Across Care Teams

  • Everyone sees the same plan

  • Reduces miscommunication between caregivers

Family Reassurance (Especially Long-Distance)

  • Provides visibility into daily structure

  • Reduces “Is Mom okay right now?” anxiety

Transition Support

  • Maintains continuity when environments change

  • Familiar system = less disorientation

Example: A client moves from home to assisted living. Memoryboard travels with them → preserves routine continuity.

Observed outcomes:

  • Fewer escalations due to confusion

  • Better family satisfaction

  • Stronger adherence to care plans

How to Set Up Memoryboard with Families

Professionals consistently report that setup quality determines success.

Here’s a workflow that works:

Step 1: Define the Goal (Clinically)

Choose 1–2 primary outcomes:

  • Reduce repetitive questions

  • Improve medication adherence

  • Support daily orientation

  • Decrease caregiver prompting

Avoid trying to solve everything at once.

Step 2: Simplify the Content

More information ≠ better results.

Focus on:

  • Today’s schedule (not the whole week)

  • Key people (not extended family)

  • Clear, short phrases

Rule of thumb: If it requires explanation, it’s too complex.

Step 3: Standardize Placement

  • Place in a high-traffic, consistent location

  • Eye-level visibility is critical

  • Avoid cluttered environments

Consistency builds habit.

Step 4: Train the Caregiver (Not Just the Patient)

This is where most tools fail.

Caregivers need to:

  • Update the board daily

  • Use it as the first reference point

  • Redirect questions back to it

Example: Instead of answering: “What are we doing today?”

They say:“Let’s check the board together.”

Step 5: Reinforce in Follow-Ups

At your next visit:

  • Ask how often it’s being used

  • Observe interaction with the board

  • Adjust complexity if needed

What Outcomes to Expect

Memoryboard isn’t a cure—and shouldn’t be positioned as one.

But when used consistently, professionals report:

For Patients

  • Reduced anxiety from disorientation

  • Improved engagement in daily life

  • Increased sense of control

For Caregivers

  • Fewer repeated questions

  • Less need for constant prompting

  • Lower overall stress

For Professionals

  • Better carryover of recommendations

  • More consistent home environments

  • Stronger measurable progress

What Memoryboard Isn’t (Clear Scope)

Being clear about limitations builds trust—and better referrals.

Memoryboard is not:

❌ A replacement for therapy

❌ A safety monitoring device

❌ A solution for late-stage dementia with minimal visual processing

❌ Effective without caregiver involvement

It works best when:

  • There is still some ability to visually engage

  • Caregivers are willing to maintain consistency

  • Professionals guide initial setup

When to Recommend Memoryboard

Consider it when a client:

  • Repeats the same questions throughout the day

  • Struggles with daily orientation

  • Relies heavily on caregiver prompting

  • Has mild to moderate cognitive impairment

  • Would benefit from structured routines

Integrating Memoryboard Into Your Practice

Many professionals are now:

  • Including it in discharge plans

  • Recommending it as part of home programs

  • Using it in caregiver education sessions

  • Referring families early (before crisis stage)

This leads to:

  • Better outcomes

  • More satisfied families

  • Higher long-term adherence to care plans

Final Thought

The challenge isn’t knowing what helps people with memory loss.

The challenge is making it happen consistently at home.

Memoryboard works because it turns your recommendations into something:

  • Visible

  • Repeatable

  • Hard to forget

And in dementia care, consistency is everything.

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