Fourteen-Year Follow-Up of Children With and Without Speech/Language Impairments

Author:

Johnson Carla J.1,Beitchman Joseph H.2,Young Arlene2,Escobar Michael1,Atkinson Leslie3,Wilson Beth2,Brownlie E. B.2,Douglas Lori2,Taback Nathan2,Lam Isabel2,Wang Min1

Affiliation:

1. University of Toronto Toronto, Ontario, Canada

2. Clarke Institute of Psychiatry Toronto, Ontario, Canada

3. Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

This report concerns the speech and language outcomes of young adults ( N = 242) who participated in a 14-year, prospective, longitudinal study of a community sample of children with ( n = 114) and without ( n = 128) speech and/or language impairments. Participants were initially identified at age 5 and subsequently followed at ages 12 and 19. Direct assessments were conducted in multiple domains (communicative, cognitive, academic, behavioral, and psychiatric) at all three time periods. Major findings included (a) high rates of continued communication difficulties in those with a history of impairment; (b) considerable stability in language performance over time; (c) better long-term outcomes for those with initial speech impairments than for those with language impairments; and (d) more favorable prognoses for those with specific language impairments than for those with impairments secondary to sensory, structural, neurological, or cognitive deficits. These general conclusions held when either a liberal or a more stringent criterion for language impairment was employed. Some of these findings are consistent with those from earlier follow-up studies, which used less optimal methods. Thus, the present replication and extension of these findings with a sound methodology enables greater confidence in their use for prognostic, planning, and research purposes.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

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