Maintaining SLPs as the Preferred Providers of Dysphagia Services: A Call to Action

Author:

Graner Darlene1,Pressman Hilda2,Wagner Lynne C. Brady3

Affiliation:

1. Mayo Clinic Rochester, MN

2. Nutritional Management Associates West Orange, New Jersey

3. Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital Boston, Massachusetts

Abstract

Speech-language pathologists (SLPs) in the general medical hospital setting spend approximately half of their time providing swallowing services. Other professions, including occupational therapists (OTs) and dietitians, promote themselves as disciplines well suited to assist patients with dysphagia. Responses to a survey distributed by the American Speech-Language-Hearing-Association (ASHA) in 2007 indicated that 83% of SLPs working in hospitals believed encroachment and defining professional boundaries was a problem. The highest level of personal experience with encroachment was with occupational therapy. Effective 2009, the American Occupational Therapy Association (AOTA) began offering Specialty Certification in Feeding, Eating and Swallowing (SCFES) to OTs and OTAs who meet specific educational and clinical experience requirements. This article reviews the many reasons why SLPs are the professionals best suited for assisting patients with swallowing disorders. It provides specific strategies to assist SLPs in promoting our discipline as the providers of dysphagia services.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

General Medicine

Reference16 articles.

1. American Occupational Therapy Association. (2007). Dysphagia talking points. Retrieved from http://www.aota.org/Practitioners/PracticeAreas/Pediatrics/Resources/40359.aspx

2. The American Occupational Therapy Association. (2009). Board and specialty certification: The process. Retrieved from http://www.aota.org/Practitioners/ProfDev/Certification/Info.aspx#1

3. Scope of practice in speech-language pathology;American Speech-Language-Hearing Association;ASHA,1996

4. American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. (2009). SLP health care survey reports. Retrieved from http://www.asha.org/research/memberdata/HealthcareSurvey09.htm

5. California Board of Occupational Therapy. (2004). Title 16 Division 39 California Code of Regulations. Retrieved from http://www.bot.ca.gov/board_activity/laws_regs/cc_regulations.shtml#4153

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