Speech-Language Pathologists' Comfort Providing Intervention to Children With Traumatic Brain Injury: Results From a National Survey

Author:

Pelatti Christina Yeager1,Bush Erin J.2,Farquharson Kelly3,Schneider-Cline Whitney4,Harvey Judy5,Carter Mary W.6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Audiology, Speech-Language Pathology, and Deaf Studies, Towson University, MD

2. Division of Communication Disorders, University of Wyoming, Laramie

3. School of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Florida State University, Tallahassee

4. Department of Communication Disorders, University of Nebraska, Kearney

5. Department of Special Education and Communication Disorders, University of Nebraska, Lincoln

6. Department of Interprofessional Health Studies, Towson University, MD

Abstract

Purpose This exploratory study examined speech-language pathologists' (SLPs) clinical experience and work environment characteristics impacting comfort with providing intervention to children with traumatic brain injury (TBI). Method This study included 162 SLPs who responded to a national survey about their comfort providing intervention to children with TBI, clinical experience (i.e., years of experience treating children with TBI, TBI preprofessional training and professional development, and licensure/credentialing), and work environment (i.e., work setting, caseload size, geographic location). Results Findings from latent class analysis revealed 3 distinct groups of SLPs based on their comfort with providing services to children with TBI: those with low comfort, moderate comfort, and high comfort. Further analyses revealed statistically significant differences across the 3 groups in the areas of years of experience treating children with TBI, professional development, work setting, TBI caseload size, and geographic location. Conclusions Our findings reveal that most SLPs feel comfortable providing intervention to children with TBI; however, differences in characteristics across groups suggest that specific steps can be taken to ensure increased comfort for all SLPs working with this population. Practicing SLPs may increase their level of comfort through professional development and hands-on, mentored experience with TBI. Efforts such as these may influence the quality of service provision and expand the population of SLPs who feel comfortable treating children with TBI. Future research is needed to further examine how comfort and SLP characteristics directly impact the quality of speech and language intervention and long-term outcomes of children with TBI.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Otorhinolaryngology

Reference57 articles.

1. American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. (2017). ASHA 2017 SLP health care survey: Survey methodology respondent demographics and glossary. Retrieved from https://www.asha.org/uploadedFiles/2017-SLP-Health-Care-Survey-Methodology.pdf

2. American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. (n.d.). Pediatric traumatic brain injury. ASHA practice portal (clinical topics). Retrieved from https://www.asha.org/Practice-Portal/Clinical-Topics/Pediatric-Traumatic-Brain-Injury/

3. Understanding predictors of functional recovery and outcome 30 months following early childhood head injury.

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