{
  "piece_id": "short2",
  "parent_script": "yt3",
  "clips": [
    {
      "platform": "LinkedIn",
      "duration": "90s",
      "screen_headline": "Why I left hospital SLP: the session time problem",
      "screen_body_copy": "The credential and the system\nare two different things.",
      "script": "[0:00] Amanda at desk, facing camera directly. No greeting. Immediate.\n[0:02] 'I want to say something that took me years in hospital SLP to be able to articulate clearly. The credential and the system are two different things. The hospital gave me the best clinical training available. The system structurally could not give patients what they needed. Both of those are true at the same time.'\n[0:18] Pause. Slightly more direct.\n[0:19] 'The case that clarified it for me was Parkinson's voice therapy. LSVT LOUD is a 16-session, four-week protocol at four sessions per week. That structure is not administrative convenience. The intensity is the intervention. The brain needs that frequency to reorganize around the voice calibration problem Parkinson's creates. [SOURCE: proof_lsvt_certification , \"LSVT LOUD certification , intensive evidence-based protocol requiring significant training to earn\"]'\n[0:40] Cut. More forward energy.\n[0:41] 'What does an outpatient insurance-based setting actually schedule for a Parkinson's patient? One session per week. Sometimes two. At 30 to 45 minutes. That is not LSVT LOUD. That is a different thing with the same name applied loosely. And families often have no way to know the difference.'\n[0:58] Brief pause.\n[0:59] 'I left because I wanted to actually run the protocol. That means a private practice model where session frequency is determined by what the evidence says patients need, not what the schedule can accommodate. [SOURCE: proof_hospital_neuro_background , \"hospital acute care SLP background before founding Lasting Language Therapy\"] That is the practice I built.'\n[1:16] Close.\n[1:17] 'If you are a caregiver for a Parkinson's patient and you want to understand what the right speech intervention actually looks like, the link in the bio has more. Or reach out directly.'",
      "caption": "The hospital credential and the hospital system are two different things. Both of those statements can be true simultaneously.\n\nLSVT LOUD requires 16 sessions over 4 weeks at four sessions per week. Most outpatient insurance-based settings schedule Parkinson's patients once a week. That gap is not a scheduling inconvenience. It is the difference between running the protocol and running something else.\n\nI left hospital SLP because I wanted to actually deliver what the evidence says Parkinson's patients need. That required building a different kind of practice.\n\nFor caregivers navigating Parkinson's speech therapy, link in bio.",
      "hook_variant_a": "The institution gave me the credential. The institution could not give my patients the session frequency LSVT LOUD requires. Those two facts lived side by side for years before I acted on them.",
      "hook_variant_b": "LSVT LOUD is four sessions per week for four weeks. Insurance-based outpatient SLP is one session per week. I left hospital SLP because that gap bothered me too much to stay."
    },
    {
      "platform": "LinkedIn B",
      "duration": "45-60s",
      "screen_headline": "The LSVT LOUD gap most clinics ignore",
      "screen_body_copy": "16 sessions in 4 weeks.\nMost outpatient clinics schedule once a week.",
      "script": "[0:00] Amanda at desk. Composed, clear, direct.\n[0:02] 'LSVT LOUD is a 16-session protocol delivered four times per week over four weeks. That is the clinical standard. That is what the research shows works for Parkinson's patients.'\n[0:14] 'Most outpatient settings schedule those same patients once per week. Which means a four-week evidence-based protocol gets stretched over four months.'\n[0:24] 'I am not saying those clinicians do not care. I am saying the system does not have room for the protocol. And that is a real problem for patients who need it to work.'\n[0:35] 'When I opened my private practice, the ability to actually deliver LSVT the way it was designed to be delivered was one of the first things I built around. Patients notice. The outcomes show it.'\n[0:50] 'If you are a Parkinson's patient or family member in the Nashville area, the intake link is in my bio.'",
      "caption": "LSVT LOUD is a 16-session protocol delivered four times per week.\n\nMost outpatient clinics schedule Parkinson's patients once per week.\n\nA four-week evidence-based protocol becomes a four-month one.\n\nThat gap is not a clinician problem. It is a systems problem.\n\nPrivate practice exists, in part, to close that gap.\n\nIf you are a Parkinson's patient or family member in the Nashville area, the intake link is in my bio.\n\n#LSVTLOUD #ParkinsonsDisease #SpeechTherapy #SLP #PrivatePractice #ParkinsonsTherapy #Nashville #LastingLanguageTherapy",
      "hook_variant_a": "LSVT LOUD is a four-times-per-week protocol. Most outpatient clinics schedule Parkinson's patients once a week. This is the gap.",
      "hook_variant_b": "A four-week evidence-based Parkinson's protocol stretched over four months. This is why the outpatient system is not always the right fit."
    },
    {
      "platform": "Instagram Reels",
      "duration": "45s",
      "screen_headline": "What families of Parkinson's patients should ask an SLP",
      "screen_body_copy": "Three questions. Ask them\nbefore the first session.",
      "script": "[0:00] Amanda, warm but direct. Reels framing.\n[0:02] 'If your family member has Parkinson's disease and a neurologist told you to see a speech-language pathologist for the voice changes, here are three specific questions to ask before you book.'\n[0:12] Hold up one finger.\n[0:13] 'First: Are you LSVT LOUD certified? This is a yes or no question. The certification requires specific formal training. It is not a continuing education credit. A certified provider has been trained in the actual protocol. [SOURCE: proof_lsvt_certification , \"LSVT LOUD certification , intensive evidence-based protocol requiring significant training to earn\"]'\n[0:26] Second finger.\n[0:27] 'Second: What does your session schedule look like for Parkinson's patients? If the answer is one session per week at 45 minutes, that is not the LSVT LOUD protocol. The protocol is four sessions per week. The intensity is the intervention.'\n[0:38] Third finger.\n[0:39] 'Third: Do you also monitor swallowing mechanics? Parkinson's affects swallowing in addition to voice. A Parkinson's SLP who only treats the voice is working with incomplete context. [SOURCE: proof_hospital_neuro_background , \"clinical background in hospital-based neuro rehabilitation , stroke, TBI, Parkinson's\"] Ask about both.'\n[0:52] Close.\n[0:53] 'Three questions. Ask them before the first session. Link in bio for more on what Parkinson's speech therapy should look like.'",
      "caption": "Your neurologist said to see an SLP. Here are three questions to ask before you book.\n\nMost families have no way to know what distinguishes an LSVT LOUD certified provider from a general SLP who covers voice therapy. These questions make that distinction visible.\n\nParkinson's voice therapy is not all equivalent. Knowing the difference matters for what your family member can expect.",
      "hashtags_first_comment": "#lsvtloud #parkinsons #speechtherapy #parkinsonsdisease #speechlanguagepathologist #parkinsonssupport #voicetherapy #atlantaspeechtherapy #neurorehabiliation #caregiversupport",
      "hook_variant_a": "Your neurologist referred you to an SLP for the Parkinson's voice changes. Here are three questions to ask before you book the first session.",
      "hook_variant_b": "Not all Parkinson's speech therapy is the same. Three questions that make the difference visible before the first session."
    },
    {
      "platform": "TikTok",
      "duration": "45s",
      "screen_headline": "What LSVT LOUD is and why most SLPs aren't certified",
      "screen_body_copy": "The intensity IS the intervention.",
      "script": "[0:00] Amanda, direct. No lead-in.\n[0:02] 'LSVT LOUD is the gold-standard voice therapy for Parkinson's disease. Here is what it actually is and why most SLPs are not certified to run it.'\n[0:10] Explaining mode, but quick.\n[0:11] 'Parkinson's creates a calibration error. The brain stops accurately perceiving how loud the patient is actually speaking. The patient thinks their voice is normal volume. Everyone around them can barely hear them. Generic voice therapy that tells the patient to speak louder does not recalibrate the system. LSVT LOUD does.'\n[0:26] Cut, slightly more energized.\n[0:27] 'The protocol is 16 sessions over 4 weeks at four sessions per week. Each session is one hour. That frequency is not arbitrary. It is what the research showed is required to produce the neurological reorganization. [SOURCE: proof_lsvt_certification , \"intensive evidence-based protocol requiring significant training to earn\"] You cannot run it correctly at one session per week.'\n[0:40] Direct close.\n[0:41] 'Most SLPs are not LSVT LOUD certified because the training requires completing a specific formal program. General voice therapy knowledge is not the same thing. When you are choosing an SLP for Parkinson's, ask if they are certified. That one question changes the conversation. [SOURCE: proof_hospital_neuro_background , \"clinical background in hospital-based neuro rehabilitation , stroke, TBI, Parkinson's\"] Link in bio.'",
      "caption": "LSVT LOUD is the gold-standard Parkinson's voice protocol. Most SLPs are not certified to run it. Here is what it actually is. #lsvtloud #parkinsons #speechtherapy #parkinsonsdisease #voicetherapy",
      "hook_variant_a": "Parkinson's creates a calibration error in the brain's voice feedback system. Generic voice therapy does not address it. LSVT LOUD does. Here is the difference.",
      "hook_variant_b": "Most SLPs are not LSVT LOUD certified. Here is what the certification actually means and why it matters for Parkinson's voice therapy."
    },
    {
      "platform": "YouTube Shorts",
      "duration": "45-60s",
      "screen_headline": "What I actually see in hospital SLP vs private practice",
      "screen_body_copy": "Same training. Different system constraints.\nDifferent outcomes.",
      "script": "[0:00] Amanda, direct to camera, relaxed but clear.\n[0:02] 'I spent years in hospital acute care doing SLP work with stroke survivors, Parkinson's patients, TBI cases.'\n[0:10] 'When I went into private practice, the clinical training was the same. What changed was how much time I had per patient, how often I could see them, and how closely I could follow the protocols that actually work.'\n[0:26] 'In hospital, you get 30 to 45 minutes, once or twice a week, in a shared space. In private practice, sessions are longer. Scheduling is built around the protocol, not the other way around.'\n[0:40] 'Same SLP training. Different system. Different outcomes.'\n[0:48] 'If you are a Parkinson's patient looking for LSVT LOUD in the Nashville area, the booking link is in my bio.'\n[0:58] End.",
      "caption": "Same SLP training. Very different system constraints.\n\nHospital acute care: 30-45 minutes, once or twice a week, shared space, scheduling built around facility capacity.\n\nPrivate practice: sessions built around the protocol, not the schedule.\n\nThe training transfers. The system does not always.\n\nBooking link in bio if you are in the Nashville area.\n\n#SLP #SpeechTherapy #ParkinsonsDisease #LSVTLOUD #PrivatePractice #HospitalSLP #Nashville #LastingLanguageTherapy",
      "hook_variant_a": "Same SLP training. Completely different system constraints. Here is what actually changes when you go from hospital to private practice.",
      "hook_variant_b": "I spent years in hospital SLP. When I opened my own practice, the training was identical. What changed was the system around it."
    }
  ]
}