Conditions & Care Education

Swallowing Exercises — What Caregivers Should Know

Oropharyngeal swallowing exercises are clinician-directed techniques that may support swallowing muscle function in selected patients with dysphagia. This page is educational information for caregivers and care-home staff — it is not a self-treatment guide. All exercises described here must be prescribed and supervised by a qualified Speech-Language Therapist (SLT).

Important: Clinician Supervision Required

Swallowing exercises carry a real risk of aspiration if performed incorrectly or by patients for whom they are not indicated. Do NOT attempt any of the exercises described below without a formal assessment and ongoing supervision from a Speech-Language Therapist (SLT). For residents in care homes with diagnosed dysphagia, consult the responsible SLT or physician before initiating any exercise programme.

Why Swallowing is Muscular

Swallowing is a coordinated neuromuscular action involving over 30 muscles. The tongue shapes and propels the food bolus; the soft palate closes the nasopharynx to prevent nasal regurgitation; the pharyngeal constrictor muscles drive the bolus downward; and the larynx elevates while the upper oesophageal sphincter relaxes to protect the airway. Age-related muscle decline (sarcopenia), neurological conditions, and structural changes can weaken any of these components, resulting in dysphagia. Targeted exercise may help maintain or partially rehabilitate muscle strength and coordination in appropriate candidates — a determination that belongs to the treating SLT.

Three Named Exercises (Educational Overview)

When to Refer to a Speech-Language Therapist

Early referral supports better outcomes. The following signs may indicate swallowing difficulty and warrant an SLT assessment. This list is for awareness — it is not diagnostic criteria:

Related resources:

RCHE Staff Training on Dysphagia Management

SeniorDeli provides dysphagia awareness and mealtime management training for RCHE staff in Cantonese, Mandarin, English, Tagalog, Bahasa, and Vietnamese. Contact us to discuss a programme for your facility.

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よくある質問

Can swallowing exercises cure dysphagia?
Swallowing exercises cannot cure dysphagia — they are one component of a broader dysphagia management plan. In appropriate patients, specifically prescribed exercises may help maintain or partially restore swallowing muscle strength and coordination. Whether exercises are appropriate, which exercises to use, and for how long are decisions that belong exclusively to the treating speech-language therapist (SLT). Caregivers should never initiate swallowing exercises without an SLT assessment.
What is the Shaker exercise and who is it for?
The Shaker exercise (head-raise exercise) targets the suprahyoid muscles that elevate the larynx and open the upper oesophageal sphincter during swallowing. The patient lies flat, lifts only the head while keeping shoulders on the surface, holds briefly, then lowers. It is used for selected patients with reduced opening of the upper oesophageal sphincter. It is contraindicated in patients with cervical spine pathology or significant cardiovascular conditions without medical clearance from a physician.
At what point should a caregiver seek a speech-language therapist referral for swallowing problems?
Referral should be sought if you observe: coughing or choking during or after meals; a wet or gurgly voice after eating or drinking; unexplained weight loss, dehydration, or reduced appetite; recurrent chest infections; difficulty managing saliva; mealtimes lasting over 30 minutes; or complaints of food sticking in the throat or chest. Early referral is strongly associated with better outcomes — do not wait for symptoms to become severe.