Curtin School of Population Health and Curtin enAble Institute, Faculty of Health Sciences, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
Independant Speech and Language Therapist, Brighton, UK.
BMJ Open. 2024 Oct 22;14(10):e087532. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-087532.
This study aims to explore the educational, occupational and socioemotional experiences of people with developmental language disorder (DLD) across the lifespan to gain insight into risk and protective factors for mental health.
Qualitative analysis of focus groups and written submissions. Data were combined and analysed using Braun and Clarke's reflexive thematic analysis approach within a critical realist framework.
Southeast England and Western Australia.
Six adults with DLD from England and five speech-language therapists from Western Australia participated in focus groups and/or contributed written responses to the research team.
We developed four themes: 'perspectives on diagnosis and living with an invisible disability' explores participants' perspectives on diagnosis, the difficulty getting a diagnosis and perceptions of DLD as widely misunderstood; 'school struggles and self-esteem from past to present' details school experiences and their impact on mental health; 'DLD across the lifespan' explores DLD in adulthood with a focus on workplace difficulties, emotional well-being and mental health; 'A sense of belonging: communication, connection and support' provides a lived experience account into the social participation difficulties of adults with DLD and the importance of social support.
Adults with DLD may experience poor self-esteem, anxiety and depression. These mental health concerns may result from (a) exhaustion due to masking/compensating for neurodevelopmental differences, (b) loneliness and/or disempowerment due to difficulties with social interaction and (c) adverse experiences such as bullying, discrimination and a lack of appropriate accommodation at school and in the workplace. A lack of awareness and support for people with DLD from health, education and employment providers was also seen as a contributing factor to poor mental health. Diagnosis may serve a protective function for mental health via self-understanding, self-esteem and self-advocacy.
本研究旨在探讨发育性语言障碍(DLD)患者在整个生命周期中的教育、职业和社会情感体验,以深入了解心理健康的风险和保护因素。
焦点小组和书面材料的定性分析。数据采用 Braun 和 Clarke 的反思性主题分析方法,结合批判性现实主义框架进行组合和分析。
英格兰东南部和西澳大利亚。
来自英格兰的 6 名 DLD 成年人和来自西澳大利亚的 5 名言语治疗师参加了焦点小组和/或向研究团队提交了书面回复。
我们开发了四个主题:“对诊断和生活在无形残疾中的看法”探讨了参与者对诊断、获得诊断的困难以及对 DLD 的广泛误解的看法;“从过去到现在的学校斗争和自尊心”详细描述了学校经历及其对心理健康的影响;“整个生命周期的 DLD”探讨了成年期的 DLD,重点是工作场所困难、情绪健康和心理健康;“归属感:沟通、联系和支持”提供了 DLD 成年人社交参与困难和社会支持重要性的生活体验描述。
患有 DLD 的成年人可能会经历自尊心低、焦虑和抑郁。这些心理健康问题可能源于(a)由于神经发育差异的掩盖/补偿而导致的疲惫,(b)由于社交互动困难而导致的孤独感和/或无力感,以及(c)在学校和工作场所遭受的诸如欺凌、歧视和缺乏适当适应等不良经历。健康、教育和就业提供者对 DLD 患者缺乏认识和支持,也被认为是心理健康状况不佳的一个促成因素。诊断可能通过自我理解、自尊心和自我倡导对心理健康起到保护作用。