Nancy Thomas-Stonell1, Bernadette Robertson1, Bruce Oddson2, Peter Rosenbaum3. 1. a Bloorview Research Institute, Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital , Toronto , ON , Canada. 2. b School of Human Kinetics, Laurentian University , Sudbury , ON , Canada. 3. c CanChild Centre for Childhood Disability Research, McMaster University , Hamilton , ON , Canada.
Abstract
PURPOSE: This paper reports changes in communicative participation skills-systematically measured and described-in an empirical observational case series of eight children receiving augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) interventions. METHOD: The eight children (seven boys, one girl), ranging from 1 year 4 months to 4 years 11 months (mean = 2.8 years; SD = 1.32 years) received varied AAC interventions (i.e. sign language, assistive technology, PECS), averaging 15 hours of treatment over a 12-month period. Parents completed an outcome measure (FOCUS) three times: at the start, mid-point (6 months) and end of the intervention period (after 12 months). They also completed the ASQ-SE at the start and end of intervention. RESULT: FOCUS scores increased over the treatment interval, indicating improvement in real-world communication skills as observed by their parents. The ASQ-SE items that pertained to communication also improved, while the items that did not correspond to communication did not. This divergence suggests that the communicative participation improvements resulted from treatment rather than general developmental gains. The largest improvements were noted in receptive language/listening, pragmatics and social/play skills. Improvements in intelligibility were also measured for several children. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that AAC intervention facilitated improvements in communicative participation skills in pre-school children.
PURPOSE: This paper reports changes in communicative participation skills-systematically measured and described-in an empirical observational case series of eight children receiving augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) interventions. METHOD: The eight children (seven boys, one girl), ranging from 1 year 4 months to 4 years 11 months (mean = 2.8 years; SD = 1.32 years) received varied AAC interventions (i.e. sign language, assistive technology, PECS), averaging 15 hours of treatment over a 12-month period. Parents completed an outcome measure (FOCUS) three times: at the start, mid-point (6 months) and end of the intervention period (after 12 months). They also completed the ASQ-SE at the start and end of intervention. RESULT: FOCUS scores increased over the treatment interval, indicating improvement in real-world communication skills as observed by their parents. The ASQ-SE items that pertained to communication also improved, while the items that did not correspond to communication did not. This divergence suggests that the communicative participation improvements resulted from treatment rather than general developmental gains. The largest improvements were noted in receptive language/listening, pragmatics and social/play skills. Improvements in intelligibility were also measured for several children. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that AAC intervention facilitated improvements in communicative participation skills in pre-school children.
Entities:
Keywords:
Augmentative and alternative communication; participation; pre-school children; treatment outcomes
Authors: Jennifer Yohanna Ferreira de Lima Antão; Acary Souza Bulle Oliveira; Renata Thaís de Almeida Barbosa; Tânia Brusque Crocetta; Regiani Guarnieri; Claudia Arab; Thaís Massetti; Thaiany Pedrozo Campos Antunes; Alan Patrício da Silva; Ĺtalla Maria Pinheiro Bezerra; Carlos Bandeira de Mello Monteiro; Luiz Carlos de Abreu Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) Date: 2018-11-29 Impact factor: 2.365