Full bibliography
Intensive multimodal communication treatment for people with chronic aphasia
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Purdy, Mary (Author)
- Wallace, Sarah E. (Author)
Title
Intensive multimodal communication treatment for people with chronic aphasia
Abstract
Background: Clinicians often teach persons with aphasia (PWA) non-verbal strategies to compensate for reduced verbal communication. The manner in which they teach the strategies may have an impact on how well PWA generalise and use the strategies. Previously, multimodal communication treatment (MCT) taught multiple modalities simultaneously. While participants demonstrated some increase in the flexible use of strategies, many communication breakdowns continued to occur. Recent research suggests that intensive treatment protocols result in the greatest increase in skills.Aims: The purpose of this study was to determine whether intensive (2-3hours/day, 5 days/week, for 2 weeks) multimodality communication training for aphasia resulted in increased successful use of verbal and non-verbal communication modalities as well as increased successful communicative repairs during structured communication tasks.Methods & Procedures: Three participants with chronic aphasia completed four baseline sessions, 10 treatment sessions across two phases (i.e., five sessions per phase), and three post-treatment sessions.Outcomes & Results: Two of the three participants demonstrated gains in the acquisition of non-verbal strategies during training and increased use of strategies on a referential communication task.Conclusions: Although MCT delivered intensely resulted in increased use of non-verbal modalities for two out of three participants, the results were similar to that achieved through the use of a non-intensive treatment protocol. Therefore, future research is needed to examine other potential modifications to maximise the gains people with aphasia receive from multimodal interventions.
Publication
Aphasiology
Date
2016
Volume
30
Issue
10
Pages
1071-1093
Journal Abbr
Aphasiology
Citation Key
ISI:000382320900001
ISSN
0268-7038
Language
English
Extra
9 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Citation Key: ISI:000382320900001
Citation Key Alias: lens.org/009-825-785-657-129
tex.eissn: [object Object]
tex.unique-id: [object Object]
Citation
Purdy, M., & Wallace, S. E. (2016). Intensive multimodal communication treatment for people with chronic aphasia. Aphasiology, 30(10), 1071–1093. https://doi.org/10.1080/02687038.2015.1102855
Link to this record