Institute of Health Services Research, Peninsula College of Medicine & Dentistry, University of Plymouth, UK.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2011 Sep-Oct;46(5):497-509. doi: 10.1111/j.1460-6984.2011.00012.x. Epub 2011 Apr 18.
Around 70% of people who develop Parkinson's disease (PD) experience speech and voice changes. Clinicians often find that when asked about their primary communication concerns, PD clients will talk about the difficulties they have 'getting into' conversations. This is an important area for clients and it has implications for quality of life and clinical management.
To review the extant literature on PD and communication impairments in order to reveal key topic areas, the range of methodologies applied, and any gaps in knowledge relating to PD and social interaction and how these might be usefully addressed.
METHODS & PROCEDURES: A systematic search of a number of key databases and available grey literatures regarding PD and communication impairment was conducted (including motor speech changes, intelligibility, cognitive/language changes) to obtain a sense of key areas and methodologies applied. Research applying conversation analysis in the field of communication disability was also reviewed to illustrate the value of this methodology in uncovering common interactional difficulties, and in revealing the use of strategic collaborative competencies in naturally occurring conversation. In addition, available speech and language therapy assessment and intervention approaches to PD were examined with a view to their effectiveness in promoting individualized intervention planning and advice-giving for everyday interaction.
A great deal has been written about the deficits underpinning communication changes in PD and the impact of communication disability on the self and others as measured in a clinical setting. Less is known about what happens for this client group in everyday conversations outside of the clinic. Current speech and language therapy assessments and interventions focus on the individual and are largely impairment based or focused on compensatory speaker-oriented techniques. A conversation analysis approach would complement basic research on what actually happens in everyday conversation for people with PD and their co-participants.
CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS: The potential benefits of a conversation analysis approach to communication disability in PD include enabling a shift in clinical focus from individual impairment onto strategic collaborative competencies. This would have implications for client-centred intervention planning and the development of new and complementary clinical resources addressing participation. The impact would be new and improved support for those living with the condition as well as their families and carers.
大约 70%的帕金森病(PD)患者会出现言语和声音变化。临床医生经常发现,当被问及他们主要的沟通问题时,PD 患者会谈论他们在“参与”对话时遇到的困难。这是患者关注的一个重要领域,对生活质量和临床管理都有影响。
回顾 PD 和沟通障碍相关的现有文献,揭示关键主题领域、应用的方法范围以及与 PD 和社会互动相关的知识空白,以及如何有效地解决这些问题。
对多个关键数据库和可用的 PD 与沟通障碍相关的灰色文献进行了系统搜索(包括运动言语变化、可理解性、认知/语言变化),以了解主要领域和应用的方法。还回顾了在沟通障碍领域应用会话分析的研究,以说明该方法在揭示常见交互困难方面的价值,并揭示在自然发生的对话中使用策略性协作能力。此外,还研究了 PD 的可用言语和语言治疗评估和干预方法,以期促进针对日常互动的个性化干预计划和建议。
有很多关于 PD 中沟通变化的基础缺陷以及沟通障碍对自我和他人的影响的研究,这些都是在临床环境中测量的。对于这个患者群体在诊所外的日常对话中发生的情况,了解得就比较少。目前的言语和语言治疗评估和干预措施主要关注个体,且大多基于损伤或侧重于补偿性的以说话者为中心的技术。会话分析方法将补充关于 PD 患者及其共同参与者在日常对话中实际发生的情况的基础研究。
会话分析方法对 PD 中的沟通障碍的潜在益处包括能够将临床重点从个体损伤转移到策略性协作能力上。这将对以患者为中心的干预计划和开发新的、互补的、解决参与问题的临床资源产生影响。其影响将为患有这种疾病的人以及他们的家人和照顾者提供新的和改进的支持。