What is dysphagia after stroke? A plain-language guide
Up to 65% of stroke survivors experience swallowing difficulty. Here's what dysphagia is, why it happens, and how IDDSI levels keep meals safer at home.
Read article
Blog
Plain-language articles on dysphagia, IDDSI levels, thickening, mealtime safety, and recipes — aligned with the stroke.food app. Each article links to the matching tool in the free app.
Up to 65% of stroke survivors experience swallowing difficulty. Here's what dysphagia is, why it happens, and how IDDSI levels keep meals safer at home.
Read article
Every IDDSI food and drink level in plain English — with examples, avoids, and testing tips from the stroke.food app library.
Read article
The same thickening steps used in stroke.food prep guides — plus flow-test timing and common mistakes caregivers make.
Read article
The pre-meal checklist from stroke.food — position, pace, posture, and what to watch for during every meal.
Read article
The same stop-the-meal warnings from the stroke.food Red Flags screen — what to do in the moment and what to tell your clinician.
Read article
Why a simple meal log helps your SLP — and how stroke.food tracks coughing, wet voice, and stopped meals on your device only.
Read article
A caregiver checklist for buying starch or gum thickeners: match your prescribed drink level, avoid clumps, and use the in-app shopping list with retailer links.
Read article
Sample Level 4 recipes from the stroke.food app — creamy oatmeal, pumpkin soup, carrot mash, and more.
Read article