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Waiting for speech-language pathology services: a randomised controlled trial comparing therapy, advice and device

Version 2 2024-06-13, 13:45
Version 1 2020-01-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 13:45 authored by S McLeod, E Davis, K Rohr, N McGill, K Miller, A Roberts, S Thornton, N Ahio, N Ivory
The Speech Pathology Association of Australia Limited. Purpose: To compare children’s speech, language and early literacy outcomes, and caregivers' empowerment and satisfaction following provision of 12 sessions of direct intervention (therapy), or face-to-face advice or a purpose-built website (device) while waiting for therapy. Method: A four-stage randomised controlled trial was undertaken involving three- to six-year-old children referred to speech-language pathology waiting lists at two Australian community health centres over eight months (n = 222). Stage 1 (screening): 149 were eligible to participate. Stage 2 (pre-assessment): 117 were assessed. Stage 3 (intervention): 110 were randomised to advice (33), device (39) or therapy (38). Stage 4 (post-assessment): 101 were re-assessed by a speech-language pathologist blinded to the intervention condition. Result: After controlling for baseline levels, children’s speech (percentage of consonants correct) was significantly higher in the therapy group compared to the advice and device conditions. Caregivers' satisfaction was also significantly higher in the therapy condition compared to the device condition. There were no significant differences between the three conditions for children’s intelligibility, language and early literacy or caregivers' empowerment. Conclusion: Therapy resulted in significantly higher speech outcomes than the advice and device conditions and was associated with significantly greater caregiver satisfaction. Provision of a website containing evidence-based material or a single session of advice may be a viable alternative while children wait for therapy targeting intelligibility, language and early literacy, and to empower caregivers.

History

Related Materials

Location

Abingdon, Eng.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

International journal of speech-language pathology

Volume

22

Season

Special Issue: Speech Pathology Australia 2019 Conference

Pagination

372-386

ISSN

1754-9515

eISSN

1754-9507

Issue

3

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

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