A Survey on the Speech Therapy Rehabilitation Landscape for Aphasia in Brazil

被引:1
|
作者
Lima, Roxele Ribeiro [1 ,5 ]
Borges, Raffaela [1 ]
Lima, Helbert do Nascimento [2 ]
Caldana, Magali de Lourdes [3 ]
Freitas, Maria Isabel D'avila [4 ]
机构
[1] Lutheran Educ Assoc Bom Jesus, Dept Speech Language Pathol, Joinville, SC, Brazil
[2] Univ Regiao Joinville, Dept Med, Joinville, SC, Brazil
[3] Univ Sao Paulo, Sch Dent Bauru FOB USP, Dept Speech, Sao Paulo, Brazil
[4] Fed Univ Santa Catarina UFSC, Dept Speech Therapy, Florianopolis, Brazil
[5] Assoc Educ Luterana Bom Jesus, Dept Fonoaudiol, Mafra 84, BR-89221665 Joinville, SC, Brazil
关键词
Speech Therapy; Rehabilitation and Aphasia; STROKE;
D O I
10.1080/02687038.2024.2314325
中图分类号
R36 [病理学]; R76 [耳鼻咽喉科学];
学科分类号
100104 ; 100213 ;
摘要
Purpose: to evaluate characteristics of aphasia rehabilitation, its barriers, and differences according to educational level (undergraduate level in speech-language pathology (SLP) or otherwise, professional qualification, Master's or Doctoral/Post-doctoral degree) and region of Brazil. Methods: A cross-sectional, quantitative, exploratory, analytical survey study was conducted. Speech therapists who work with people with aphasia (PwA) were invited to answer the online survey. Participants were recruited through the Brazilian Society of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology and by snowball sampling. Results: Of the 103 participants, 55 (53%) were from the Southeast region, 55 (53.4%) held an SLP undergraduate or professional specialization degree only, 21 (20.4%) a Master's, and 27 (26.2%) a Doctoral or Post-doctoral degrees. Standardized instruments for assessing aphasia were used by 51 (49.5%) respondents. Functional therapy was used in 99% of cases. Professionals holding Doctoral or Post-doctoral degrees had a greater level of engagement in conferences (p=0.014) and in professional associations/societies than therapists qualified with lower education degrees (p<0.001). The high-educated group worked more with PWA during the year (p=0.002) and with more public health system users (p=0.002). These professionals also made greater use of telerehabilitation (p<0.001), group therapy approaches (p=0.015), and Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (p=0.009). Additionally, they charged higher private consultation fees (p<0.001) and were predominantly from the Southeast region (p=0.047). Professionals from the South region delivered more outpatient care to PwA (p=0.007). All participants from the Southeast region used a multimodal therapy approach (p=0.021). For chronic PwA, professionals holding a Doctoral or Postdoctoral degree (p=0.035), and those from the Southeast region (p=0.049) provided therapy for longer. Conclusion: Results revealed differences in type of therapeutic approach, assessment instruments and duration of aphasia treatment, according to region and postgraduate level of education. Future studies should investigate the causes of these disparities, along with barriers or approach preferences that may stem from undergraduate training and impact aphasia treatment approaches in Brazil.
引用
收藏
页码:1463 / 1483
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Speech Therapy Mobile Applications for People with Aphasia: PRISMA review and features analysis
    Kamaruddin, Afiqah Iylia
    Masrom, Maslin
    Aziz, Mohd Azmarul A.
    Noor, Norliza Mohd
    Kamaruddin, Afiqah Iylia
    Aziz, Mohd Azmarul A.
    1ST NATIONAL BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING CONFERENCE (NBEC 2021): ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY FOR MODERN HEALTHCARE, 2021, : 77 - 81
  • [42] KomSim - Speech Rehab for Aphasia
    Hansen, Thomas
    Thybaek-Hansen, Niels
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 8TH EUROPEAN CONFERENCE ON GAMES BASED LEARNING (ECGBL 2014), VOLS 1 AND 2, 2014, : 800 - 804
  • [43] Apportioning time for aphasia rehabilitation
    Code, Chris
    APHASIOLOGY, 2012, 26 (05) : 729 - 735
  • [44] Study on Language Rehabilitation for Aphasia
    Yu Zeng-Zhi
    Jiang Shu-Jun
    Jia Zi-Shan
    Xiao Hong-Yu
    Zhou Mei-Qi
    中华医学杂志英文版, 2017, 130 (12) : 1491 - 1497
  • [45] Assisting the Client in Aphasia Speech Therapy: A Sequential and Multimodal Analysis of Cueing Practices
    Merlino, Sara
    HACETTEPE UNIVERSITESI EGITIM FAKULTESI DERGISI-HACETTEPE UNIVERSITY JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, 2018, 33 : 334 - 357
  • [46] Digital tool as speech and language therapy for patients with post-stroke aphasia
    Ruiz Ares, Gerardo
    Martin Alonso, Marta
    Rigual, Ricardo
    Hervas Testal, Carlos
    Torres Iglesias, Gabriel
    Casado Fernandez, Laura
    de Celis Ruiz, Elena
    Rodriguez Pardo, Jorge
    Carvajal Munoz, Jenny
    Gonzalez Martin, Laura
    Alonso de Lecinana, Maria
    Fuentes, Blanca
    DIGITAL HEALTH, 2025, 11
  • [47] Clinical observation of scalp acupuncture plus speech rehabilitation for Broca’s aphasia after cerebral stroke
    Teng Y.-Y.
    Journal of Acupuncture and Tuina Science, 2017, 15 (2) : 104 - 108
  • [48] Speech and language therapists' perspectives of therapeutic alliance construction and maintenance in aphasia rehabilitation post-stroke
    Lawton, Michelle
    Sage, Karen
    Haddock, Gillian
    Conroy, Paul
    Serrant, Laura
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE & COMMUNICATION DISORDERS, 2018, 53 (03) : 550 - 563
  • [49] New approach to the rehabilitation of post-stroke focal cognitive syndrome: Effect of levodopa combined with speech and language therapy on functional recovery from aphasia
    Seniow, J.
    Litwin, M.
    Litwin, T.
    Lesniak, M.
    Czlonkowska, A.
    JOURNAL OF THE NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2009, 283 (1-2) : 214 - 218
  • [50] A clinical study of the combined use of bromocriptine and speech and language therapy in the treatment of a person with aphasia
    Galling, Mandy A.
    Goorah, Neetish
    Berthier, Marcelo L.
    Sage, Karen
    APHASIOLOGY, 2014, 28 (02) : 171 - 187