A scoping review of the evidence for the use of screening tools in people with intellectual disabilities with dysphagia

Author:

O'Leary Lisa1ORCID,Maine Andrew1ORCID,Ring Nicola1,Reid James2,Speirs Lorraine2,Allan Louise1,Truesdale Maria3ORCID,Taggart Laurence4

Affiliation:

1. School of Health and Social Care Edinburgh Napier University Edinburgh UK

2. NHS Forth Valley, Community Hospital Stirling UK

3. Institute of Health and Well Being University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

4. Ulster University Coleraine UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundDysphagia can have serious health implications including choking and respiratory infection leading to poorer quality of life. People with intellectual disabilities are at higher risk of dysphagia related health complications and early death. Robust dysphagia screening tools are vital for this population.MethodA scoping review and appraisal of the evidence for dysphagia and feeding screening tools for use with people with intellectual disabilities was undertaken.ResultsSeven studies (using six screening tools) met the review inclusion criteria. Mostly studies were limited by no defined dysphagia criteria, no verification of tools with a gold reference standard (e.g., videofluoroscopic examination) and lack of participant diversity (small samples, narrow age range, severity of intellectual disability or limited settings).ConclusionsThere is urgent need for development and rigorous appraisal of existing dysphagia screening tools to meet the needs of a wider range of people with intellectual disabilities (particularly mild‐to‐moderate severity) and in wider settings.

Funder

Edinburgh Napier University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education

Reference58 articles.

1. American Speech‐Language‐Hearing Association. (2019).Swallowing screening.https://www.asha.org/practice-portal/clinical-topics/adult-dysphagia/swallowing-screening

2. Scoping studies: towards a methodological framework

3. An autopsy approach to bolus deaths

4. Bedside screening tests vs. videofluoroscopy or fibreoptic endoscopic evaluation of swallowing to detect dysphagia in patients with neurological disorders: systematic review

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