| Literature DB >> 31765232 |
Eleanor Sugden1,2, Elise Baker1, A Lynn Williams3, Natalie Munro1, Carol M Trivette4.
Abstract
Purpose Evidence for the multiple oppositions intervention approach indicates it should be delivered 3 times weekly; however, this high dose frequency is not provided by many speech-language pathologists worldwide. This study investigated whether parents could be involved in delivering phonological intervention to fulfill this intensity shortfall. Method Five children with moderate-to-severe phonological impairment aged 3;3-5;11 (years;months) and 1 of their parents participated in this study using a multiple-baseline across participants design. Participants attended one 60-min clinic-based session per week for 8 weeks, and parents completed home practice 2 times per week over this period after receiving training. Parents also attended a 60-min training session prior to commencing intervention. Results All children showed a treatment effect to treated words. Three of the 5 children demonstrated a large effect size for generalization to nontreatment words, with 1 child demonstrating a moderate effect and 1 child demonstrating no effect. However, all children showed qualitative changes to their speech system. Three of the 5 children experienced significant changes to communicative participation. Measures of treatment fidelity indicated that parents were able to competently deliver the intervention both within the clinic and at home. Conclusions Combined parent- and speech-language pathologist-delivered multiple oppositions intervention is effective for some children with moderate-to-severe phonological impairment. The findings indicate that parents can be trained to competently and confidently deliver phonological intervention. Further evidence is needed to identify optimal child and parent characteristics most suited to this modified service delivery approach. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.10565885.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31765232 DOI: 10.1044/2019_AJSLP-18-0248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Speech Lang Pathol ISSN: 1058-0360 Impact factor: 2.408