Litcius/Paper detail

Improving Functional Communication Outcomes in Post-Stroke Aphasia via Telepractice: An Alternative Service Delivery Model for Underserved Populations

Portia Carr, Dana Moser, Shana M. Williamson, Greg Robinson, Stephen Kintz

2022International Journal of Telerehabilitation12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Many persons with aphasia (PWA) have limited access to speech-language treatment (SLT) due to limited funding, speech-language pathologist shortages, geographical barriers, physical disabilities, transportation barriers, and the COVID-19 pandemic. The purpose of this study was to determine if telepractice is an effective and feasible service delivery model for PWA. Ten PWA completed 8 hours of remote treatment over 4 weeks. Synchronous telepractice sessions employed Oral Reading for Language in Aphasia (ORLA) and Conversational Script Training (CST). Pre- and post-assessment outcome measures included the Communication Activities of Daily Living-3 (CADL-3) and the Communication Confidence Rating Scale for Aphasia (CCRSA). Participants completed a telepractice satisfaction survey following post-assessment. All participants demonstrated improvements in CCRSA scores, total words produced correctly on trained CST stimuli, and total words produced correctly on trained ORLA stimuli. No differences were noted in CADL-3 scores. All participants were highly satisfied with telepractice as a service delivery model.

Topics & Concepts

TelerehabilitationAphasiaAugmentative and alternative communicationService delivery frameworkTelemedicineRating scaleEconomic shortageMedicineService (business)TelehealthPsychologyComputer scienceBusinessHealth carePhilosophyGovernment (linguistics)PsychiatryEconomic growthMarketingLinguisticsDevelopmental psychologyEconomicsStroke Rehabilitation and RecoveryNeurobiology of Language and BilingualismTelemedicine and Telehealth Implementation