UW Speech and Hearing Clinic Relocated to Mountain View Medical Park
Published September 26, 2025

UW’s Speech and Hearing Clinic, formerly located in the UW College of Health Sciences Building, has relocated to the Mountain View Medical Park (exterior pictured), located at 2710 E. Harney St. Renovation efforts have transformed the new space into a state-of-the-art facility designed for speech, language and hearing services and training future professionals. (UW Photo)
The University of Wyoming Speech and Hearing Clinic, formerly located in the UW College
of Health Sciences Building, has relocated to the Mountain View Medical Park, located
at 2710 E. Harney St.
The university, the College of Health Sciences, and Maggie and Dick Scarlett supported
the Division of Communication Disorders in renovation efforts, transforming the new
space into a state-of-the-art facility designed for speech, language and hearing services
and training future professionals.
The clinic now includes 10 patient treatment rooms, including two preschool rooms,
and several telehealth rooms, allowing patients in surrounding communities to access
high-quality care. Three of the rooms are dedicated to group therapy, addressing a
long-standing need as the clinic expands group services, treatment approaches, and
coaching for parents and family members of people with communication needs.
The facility also features a state-of-the-art, HIPAA-compliant, closed-circuit video
recording system. The video feed can be viewed in an on-site clinical instruction
room, a dedicated space for students in the master’s program in speech-language pathology.
Additionally, the clinic houses a new audiology booth and equipment, dedicated patient
counseling space and a new video endoscope system -- one of only two such units in
the state. Including faculty offices, the new Speech and Hearing Clinic occupies 5,500
square feet on the first floor of Mountain View Medical Park.
The Division of Communication Disorders staff and clinical faculty members carefully
planned the layout, set up the clinic, and prepared the space to best serve patients
and train students. The clinic provides about 3,000 patient contacts a year.
Mark Guiberson, professor and director of the Division of Communication Disorders,
emphasizes the importance of the expanded space for both patient care and student
learning.
“We’re thrilled to have this new, state-of-the-art clinic, and we’re so grateful to
Maggie and Dick Scarlett for making it possible. Our clinical faculty and staff worked
incredibly hard to plan, set up and get this space ready,” Guiberson says. “Before,
we were squeezing telehealth stations into tiny offices and hunting for group therapy
space across campus. Now, our students have hands-on training for a solid clinical
foundation, and the community has much greater access to services.”
The clinic relocation and expansion were made possible, in part, through the generous
support of Maggie and Dick Scarlett. Maggie, recognized as a distinguished alumna
of the university this year, earned her bachelor’s degree in speech-language and hearing
sciences and has long been a supporter of the Division of Communication Disorders.
“Dick and I are grateful to have been part of this renovation and the exciting progress
it represents,” she says. “We congratulate Mark Guiberson, the staff and the clinic
faculty for their outstanding efforts. The new clinic stands as a powerful resource,
meeting the needs of speech, language and hearing patients while preparing the next
generation of professionals. We are proud to see this meaningful chapter added to
the division’s ongoing success.”
“The relocation of the UW Speech and Hearing Clinic to Mountain View Medical Park
represents an exciting step forward for the College of Health Sciences and the Division
of Communication Disorders,” says Patrick Hardigan, dean of the College of Health
Sciences. “This state-of-the-art facility expands our ability to provide exceptional
patient care while ensuring our students gain hands-on training in a modern, purpose-built
clinical environment.
“We are deeply grateful to Maggie and Dick Scarlett for their generosity and vision,
which made this renovation possible. I also want to acknowledge the leadership of
Dr. Mark Guiberson, division chair, whose guidance and commitment were instrumental
in planning and realizing this project,” Hardigan adds. “Together with the dedication
of our faculty and staff, this clinic ensures that Wyoming communities have greater
access to high-quality speech, language and hearing services while preparing the next
generation of professionals who will carry this mission forward.”
Once the Speech and Hearing Clinic move is complete, an open house will be held in
Suite 100 at the medical park Friday, Oct. 3, from 2-4 p.m. For more information,
call (307) 766-6427.
About UW’s College of Health Sciences
UW’s College of Health Sciences trains health and wellness professionals and researchers
in a wide variety of disciplines, including medicine, nursing, pharmacy, speech-language
pathology, social work, kinesiology, public health, health administration and disability
studies. The college also oversees residency and fellowship programs in Casper and
Cheyenne, as well as operating a speech/hearing clinic in Laramie and primary care
clinics in Laramie, Casper and Cheyenne.
With more than 1,600 undergraduate, graduate and professional students, the college is dedicated to training the health and wellness workforce of Wyoming and conducting high-quality research and community engagement, with a particular focus on rural and frontier populations.