Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, Centre of Speech and Language Sciences Ghent University, Gent, Belgium.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2023 Mar;58(2):326-341. doi: 10.1111/1460-6984.12788. Epub 2022 Oct 3.
Increasing attention is paid to the effectiveness of high-intensity speech intervention in children with a cleft (lip and) palate (CP±L). It is, however, unknown if high-intensity intervention is acceptable to the intervention recipients. Parents have an integral role in supporting their children with intervention highlighting the importance of intervention acceptability to parents.
To compare the retrospective acceptability of high-intensity speech intervention (10 1-hr speech therapy sessions divided over 2 weeks) with the retrospective acceptability of low-intensity speech intervention (10 1-hr speech therapy sessions divided over 10 weeks) for children with a CP±L from the parents' point of view.
METHODS & PROCEDURES: Twelve parents of 12 children, aged 6-0 years who received high-intensity speech intervention (n = 6) or low-intensity speech intervention (n = 6), were invited to participate in this study. Seven parents (n = 3 in the high-intensity group and n = 4 in the low-intensity group) agreed to participate (total response rate: 7/12, 58.33%). A qualitative study design using semi-structured interviews was applied. To investigate the retrospective acceptability of the two intervention intensities, deductive coding according to the Theoretical Framework of Acceptability (TFA) was used.
OUTCOMES & RESULTS: With regard to the TFA construct 'affective attitude', results demonstrated that parents had positive feelings about the provided speech intervention regardless of the intensity. Parents of children who received high-intensity speech intervention reported two specific benefits related to the high intervention intensity: (1) it improved their relationship with the speech-language pathologist and (2) it improved their child's ability to make self-corrections in his/her speech. Even though both high-intensive and low-intensity speech intervention were considered burdensome (TFA construct 'burden'), parents were less likely to drop out of high-intensity intervention because the total intervention period was kept short.
CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS: In conclusion, high-intensity speech intervention seemed acceptable to parents. More positive codes were identified for some of the TFA constructs in the high-intensity intervention group than in the low-intensity intervention group. Considering that some parents doubted their self-efficacy to participate in high-intensity speech intervention, speech-language pathologists need to counsel them so that they can adhere to the high intervention intensity. Future studies should investigate whether high-intensity speech intervention is also acceptable to the children who receive the intervention and to the speech-language pathologists who deliver the intervention.
What is already known on this subject Increasing attention is paid to the effectiveness of high-intensity speech intervention in children with a cleft (lip and) palate (CP±L). Different quantitative studies have shown positive speech outcomes after high-intensity cleft speech intervention. Despite this increasing attention to high-intensity speech intervention, it is unknown whether high-intensity intervention is also acceptable to the intervention recipients. This study compared the retrospective acceptability of high-intensity speech intervention (10 1-hour speech therapy sessions divided over 2 weeks) with the retrospective acceptability of low-intensity speech intervention (10 1-hour speech therapy sessions divided over 10 weeks) in children with a CP±L from the parents' point of view. What this paper adds to existing knowledge More positive codes were identified for some of the TFA constructs in the high-intensity intervention group than in the low-intensity intervention group. Nevertheless, some parents doubted their self-efficacy to participate in high-intensity speech intervention. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? The findings of this study forces us to reconsider the traditional cleft speech intervention delivery models which usually consist of low-intensity intervention. Speech-language pathologists need to counsel parents and so that they can adhere to the high intervention intensity.
人们越来越关注高强度语音干预在唇腭裂(CP±L)儿童中的有效性。然而,目前尚不清楚高强度干预是否能被干预对象接受。父母在支持孩子进行干预方面起着重要作用,这凸显了干预可接受性对父母的重要性。
从父母的角度比较高强度语音干预(10 个 1 小时的语音治疗课程,2 周内完成)和低强度语音干预(10 个 1 小时的语音治疗课程,10 周内完成)的回顾性接受程度。
12 名年龄在 6-0 岁接受过高强度语音干预(n = 6)或低强度语音干预(n = 6)的 CP±L 儿童的父母被邀请参加这项研究。有 7 位父母(高强度组 3 位,低强度组 4 位)同意参加(总回应率:7/12,58.33%)。采用半结构式访谈的定性研究设计。为了调查两种干预强度的回顾性可接受性,根据可接受性理论框架(TFA)进行了演绎编码。
关于 TFA 结构“情感态度”,结果表明,无论干预强度如何,父母对所提供的语音干预都有积极的感受。接受高强度语音干预的儿童的父母报告了与高强度干预相关的两个具体好处:(1)它改善了他们与言语语言病理学家的关系,(2)它提高了他们孩子在言语自我纠正方面的能力。尽管高强度和低强度语音干预都被认为是负担(TFA 结构“负担”),但父母不太可能因为高强度干预的总干预期保持较短而退出干预。
总之,高强度语音干预似乎可以被父母接受。高强度干预组中一些 TFA 结构的编码更为积极。考虑到一些父母对自己参与高强度语音干预的能力表示怀疑,言语语言病理学家需要对他们进行辅导,以便他们能够坚持高强度干预。未来的研究应该调查高强度语音干预是否也能被接受干预的儿童和提供干预的言语语言病理学家接受。