Discipline of Speech Pathology, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney School of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Doctor Liang Voice Program, Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney School of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
PLoS One. 2021 Apr 28;16(4):e0250308. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0250308. eCollection 2021.
To evaluate the evidence of aerosol generation across tasks involved in voice and speech assessment and intervention, to inform better management and to reduce transmission risk of such diseases as COVID-19 in healthcare settings and the wider community.
Systematic literature review.
Medline, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, CINAHL, PubMed Central and grey literature through ProQuest, The Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine, COVID-Evidence and speech pathology national bodies were searched up until August 13th, 2020 for articles examining the aerosol-generating activities in clinical voice and speech assessment and intervention within speech pathology.
Of the 8288 results found, 39 studies were included for data extraction and analysis. Included articles were classified into one of three categories: research studies, review articles or clinical guidelines. Data extraction followed appropriate protocols depending on the classification of each article (e.g. PRISMA for review articles). Articles were assessed for risk of bias and certainty of evidence using the GRADE system. Six behaviours were identified as aerosol generating. These were classified into three categories: vegetative acts (coughing, breathing), verbal communication activities of daily living (speaking, loud voicing), and performance-based tasks (singing, sustained phonation). Certainty of evidence ranged from very low to moderate with variation in research design and variables.
This body of literature helped to both identify and categorise the aerosol-generating behaviours involved in speech pathology clinical practice and confirm the low level of evidence throughout the speech pathology literature pertaining to aerosol generation. As many aerosol-generating behaviours are common human behaviours, these findings can be applied across healthcare and community settings.
Registration number CRD42020186902 with PROSPERO International Prospective Register for Systematic Reviews.
评估涉及语音评估和干预的各项任务中气溶胶产生的证据,以便更好地管理,并降低 COVID-19 等疾病在医疗保健环境和更广泛社区中的传播风险。
系统文献回顾。
通过 ProQuest 检索 Medline、Embase、Scopus、Web of Science、CINAHL、PubMed Central 和灰色文献,以及循证医学中心、COVID-Evidence 和言语病理学国家机构,截至 2020 年 8 月 13 日,检索了在言语病理学中检查临床语音评估和干预中气溶胶生成活动的文章。
在 8288 项研究结果中,有 39 项研究纳入了数据提取和分析。纳入的文章被分为三类:研究性文章、综述文章或临床指南。根据每篇文章的分类(如综述文章的 PRISMA),遵循适当的协议进行数据提取。使用 GRADE 系统评估文章的偏倚风险和证据确定性。确定了 6 种行为是气溶胶生成的。这些行为被分为三类:植物性动作(咳嗽、呼吸)、日常言语交流活动(说话、大声发声)和基于表现的任务(唱歌、持续发音)。证据确定性的等级从极低到中等不等,研究设计和变量存在差异。
这组文献有助于识别和分类言语病理学临床实践中涉及的气溶胶生成行为,并确认与气溶胶生成相关的言语病理学文献中证据水平较低。由于许多气溶胶生成行为是常见的人类行为,这些发现可以应用于医疗保健和社区环境。
在 PROSPERO 国际前瞻性系统评价注册中心注册的注册号为 CRD42020186902。