Tele-intervention for children with hearing loss: A comparative pilot study

Author:

Havenga Estienne1,Swanepoel De Wet123,le Roux Talita1,Schmid Brenda4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, University of Pretoria, South Africa

2. Ear Sciences Centre, The University of Western Australia, Australia

3. Ear Science Institute Australia, Australia

4. Centre for Listening and Spoken Language, South Africa

Abstract

Introduction This pilot study compared tele-intervention to conventional intervention for children with hearing loss in terms of communication performance, parental perceptions and clinician perceptions. Methods A within-subject design was employed, including 10 children with hearing loss and their parents who each received a structurally similar tele-intervention and conventional intervention session in a counterbalanced manner. Quality of communication performance was analysed using a modified Tait video analysis method. Parent and clinician perceptions were collected through rating-scale surveys and thematic analysis of qualitative responses. Results No significant difference ( p > 0.05) was found between tele-intervention and conventional intervention in terms of communication performance of children. Parent perceptions were not significantly different ( p > 0.05) between conventional and tele-intervention in terms of facilitating meaningful communication interaction. Significant differences were evident for parents' comfort level during the session, whether they found it to be a beneficial experience and whether they would like to continue receiving intervention through this method.  Clinician perceptions of conventional and tele-intervention were not significantly different ( p > 0.05) and tele-intervention was deemed a valuable method of service delivery for clients. Discussion This study provides preliminary evidence that tele-intervention is effective for communication intervention and can be a valuable solution to typical barriers such as distance and the shortage of trained interventionists.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Informatics

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