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Paediatric Language Therapy: Cheese on toast or chocolate cake

. Paediatric Language Group: Recap. Last year we looked at service delivery ie: group vs individualdirect vs indirect Outcomes: Therapy is good, but no clear difference between service modes (eg some studies group therapy was cheaper, other studies group therapy more expensive)Differences

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Paediatric Language Therapy: Cheese on toast or chocolate cake

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    1. Paediatric Language Therapy: Cheese on toast or chocolate cake? Paediatric Language Group

    2. Paediatric Language Group: Recap Last year we looked at service delivery ie: group vs individual direct vs indirect Outcomes: Therapy is good, but no clear difference between service modes (eg some studies group therapy was cheaper, other studies group therapy more expensive) Differences in outcome of therapy related to: intensity of therapy what kind of therapy rather than service delivery.

    3. Question for this year was: In children 0-6 years, what is the optimum intensity of treatment in treating Specific Language Impairment?

    4. Current Question - Literature Search Cirrin, Frank M; Gillam, Ronald B.(2008): Language InterventionPractices for School-Age Children With Spoken LanguageDisorders: A Systematic Review Language, Speech & Hearing Services in Schools 39.1110-37. Mendelsohn, Alan L; Mogilner, Leora N; Dreyer, Bernard P; Forman, Joel A; et al (2001).The impact of a clinic-based literacy intervention onlanguagedevelopment in inner-city preschool children Pediatrics107.1: 130-4. Gillam, Ronald B; Loeb, Diane Frome; Hoffman, LaVae M; Bohman, Thomas; Champlin, Craig A; et al.(2008): The Efficacy of Fast ForWordLanguage Interventionin School-Age Children WithLanguageImpairment: A Randomized Controlled TrialJournal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research51.197-119.

    5. Current Question - Literature Search Swanson, Lori A; Fey, Marc E; Mills, Carrie E; Hood, Lynn S. (2005) Use of Narrative-BasedLanguage InterventionWith Children Who Have SpecificLanguageImpairmentAmerican Journal of Speech - Language Pathology 14.2: 131-43. Warren, Steven F; Fey, Marc E; Finestack, Lizbeth H; Brady, Nancy C; Bredin-Oja, Shelley L; et al. (Apr 2008) A Randomized Trial of Longitudinal Effects of Low-IntensityResponsivity Education/Prelinguistic Milieu TeachingJournal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research51.2451-70.

    6. Current Question - Literature Search Brinton, Bonnie; Fujiki, Martin. (2006) SocialInterventionfor Children WithLanguageImpairment: Factors Affecting Efficacy Communication Disorders Quarterly28.1: 39-41,62. Paul, Diane; Roth, Froma P.(2011) Guiding Principles and Clinical Applications for Speech-LanguagePathology Practice in EarlyInterventionLanguage, Speech & Hearing Services in Schools (Online)42.3: 320-330A.

    7. Problems Definitions of dosage/ intensity different in different articles. Not many articles directly looking at intensity/dosage Generally only mentioned as part of other investigations. Many different treatment types targeting SLI

    8. Current Question 3 review articles Dosage in language therapy Narrative intervention summary Dosage & distribution in morphosyntax intervention summary

    9. Article Warren S, Fey M, & Yoder P. Differential treatment intensity research: a missing link to creating optimally effective communication interventions. Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities 2007: 13, 70-77 research review & discussion paper noted that in general therapy is effective general consensus that early intervention is effective in medical research dosage is clearly defined, in communication research it is not different definitions for treatment intensity eg: quality and quantity of services in a given time number of hours of intervention in specific time period level of participation in a service offered over time ratio of adults: children in intervention context number of specific teaching/therapeutic episodes per unit of time

    10. no consensus on unit of measurement used across time argument for standardising terminology (similar to medical fields) 4 factors proposed to consider when defining cumulative intervention intensity: (multiply these together) dose: the number of properly administered teaching episodes during a single session of intervention X dose form: active ingredient ie typical task or activity within which the teaching episodes are delivered eg structured drills, prompts for imitation X dose frequency: number of times a dose of intervention is provided per day and per week X * total intervention duration: time period over which a specified intervention is presented X * *usually well defined in research studies of each intervention type should look to define cumulative intervention intensity

    11. Morphosyntax Intervention Proctor-Williams, K. (2009) Dosage and distribution in morphosyntax intervention: current evidence and future needs. Topics in Language Disorders, 29, 294-311 Review article Outlines & evaluates dose forms and intervention contexts used to facilitate morphosyntactic acquistion. Evaluates research outcomes and provides examples of dosage components Identifies lack of systematic comparisons of dosage forms and measurement in research

    12. Dose forms Techniques: Time delay/slow rate Model Recast Expansion Imitation/mand Imitation/feedback Question Direct instruction

    13. Dose forms cont Procedures: May combine 2 or more techniques Effects may be additive or may negate effectiveness of one another Order of presentation of techniques within procedure may be important to efficacy Intervention contexts: Child centred Hybrid Clinician directed

    14. Dosage Distribution within session Dose frequency: eg optimal frequency of recasts. occur 3.5 times more frequently in therapy than available in childs typical environment. children whose parents used higher rates of recasts showed greater gains. parents had difficulty sustaining high rate of recasts as childrens language improved

    15. Hoffman, LM Narrative Language Intervention Intensity and dosage (2009). Topics in Language Disorders 29 (4), 329-343 Responded to Warren, Fey and Yoders (2007) article by beginning to define the active ingredients in Narrative Intervention Proposed further investigations into the teaching of Episodic Structure Reading & Interest Levels Genre Discourse Level Teaching and Performance Inference/moral/culture Suggested we need to further clarify the potent point or active ingredients before we are able to monitor dosage.

    16. Massed or Distributed Practise? Riches, NG, Tommasello, M, Conti-Ramsden, G. Verb Learning in Children with SLI: Frequency and Spacing Effects. Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research 2005: 48, 1397-1411 Experimental group : 24 children with SLI (mean age 5;6) -1SD on CELF-P & normal intelligence Control group: 24 children with typically developing language & intelligence (mean age 3;4) All excluded hearing loss, social and emotional difficulties & Bilingualism No significant difference in MLU, Talkativeness, British Picture Vocabulary Test. SLI group performed slightly better on the Expressive Vocabulary Test

    17. Riches et al 2005 continued Modelled three novel verbs for a range of actions in play sessions Look, its VERBing! See, it VERBs! 2x2 experimental design combining 2 training regimes (massed and spaced) (a) Massed 12, with 12 exposures on a single day, (b) Massed 18, with 18 exposures on a single day, (c) Spaced 12, with 12 exposures spread over 4 days (3 per day), and (c) Spaced18, with 18 exposures spread over 4 days (4,5,4,5).

    18. Riches et al 2005 continued

    19. Riches et al 2005 continued Clinical Bottom Line Distributed practise leads to better learning and retention in all children (for verb learning), but it is particularly important for children with SLI

    20. Clinical bottom line Therapy is good Distributed practice is more effective than massed practice Active ingredients not clearly enough defined in the literature

    21. Clinical practice Surveys of clinicians also indicate therapists are not able to clearly define their active ingredient Everyone is doing a good job, kids are achieving goals but we are not good at explaining what we are doing when we say we are doing language therapy Language therapy isnt simple like cheese on toast, its complicated like chocolate cake. We need to be better at explaining HOW we made our chocolate cake so that other people can also make fantastic chocolate cake too!!

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