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A multimodal communication program for aphasia during inpatient rehabilitation: A case study.
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Wallace, Sarah E (Author)
- Purdy, Mary (Author)
- Skidmore, Elizabeth (Author)
Title
A multimodal communication program for aphasia during inpatient rehabilitation: A case study.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Communication is essential for successful rehabilitation, yet few aphasia treatments have been investigated during the acute stroke phase. Alternative modality use including gesturing, writing, or drawing has been shown to increase communicative effectiveness in people with chronic aphasia. Instruction in alternative modality use during acute stroke may increase patient communication and participation, therefore resulting in fewer adverse situations and improved rehabilitation outcomes., OBJECTIVE: The study purpose was to explore a multimodal communication program for aphasia (MCPA) implemented during acute stroke rehabilitation. MCPA aims to improve communication modality production, and to facilitate switching among modalities to resolve communication breakdowns., METHODS: Two adults with severe aphasia completed MCPA beginning at 2 and 3 weeks post onset a single left-hemisphere stroke. Probes completed during each session allowed for evaluation of modality production and modality switching accuracy., RESULTS: Participants completed MCPA (10 and 14 treatment sessions respectively) and their performance on probes suggested increased accuracy in the production of various alternate communication modalities. However, increased switching to an alternate modality was noted for only one participant., CONCLUSIONS: Further investigation of multimodal treatment during inpatient rehabilitation is warranted. In particular, comparisons between multimodal and standard treatments would help determine appropriate interventions for this setting.
Publication
NeuroRehabilitation
Date
2014
Volume
35
Issue
3
Pages
615-25
Journal Abbr
NeuroRehabilitation
DOI
Citation Key
wallaceMultimodalCommunicationProgram2014
ISSN
1878-6448
Language
English
Extra
11 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31]
Place: Netherlands
Wallace, Sarah E. Department of Speech-Language Pathology, Duquesne University, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Purdy, Mary. Communication Disorders Department, Southern Connecticut State University, New Haven, CT, USA.
Skidmore, Elizabeth. Department of Occupational Therapy, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Citation
Wallace, S. E., Purdy, M., & Skidmore, E. (2014). A multimodal communication program for aphasia during inpatient rehabilitation: A case study. NeuroRehabilitation, 35(3), 615–625. https://doi.org/10/gf2tgz
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