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Teaching vocabulary to adolescents with language disorder: perspectives from teachers and speech and language therapists
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Addressing patients’ communication support needs through speech-language pathologist-nurse information-sharing: Employing ethnography to understand the acute stroke context
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Evaluación y descripción del desarrollo del discurso narrativo en español/Evaluation and description of narrative development in Spanish
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A pilot economic evaluation of a feasibility trial for SUpporting wellbeing through PEeR-Befriending (SUPERB) for post-stroke aphasia
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Flood, C.; Behn, N.; Marshall, J.; Simpson, A.; Northcott, S.; Thomas, S.; Goldsmith, K.; McVicker, S.; Jofre-Bonet, M.; Hilari, K.. - : SAGE Publications, 2022
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Abstract:
Objectives To explore the feasibility of a full economic evaluation of usual care plus peer-befriending versus usual care control, and potential cost-effectiveness of peer-befriending for people with aphasia. To report initial costs, ease of instruments’ completion and overall data completeness. Design Pilot economic evaluation within a feasibility randomised controlled trial Setting Community, England Participants People with post-stroke aphasia and low levels of psychological distress Intervention All participants received usual care; intervention participants received six peer-befriending visits between randomisation and four months Main measures Costs were collected on the stroke-adapted Client Service Receipt Inventory (CSRI) for health, social care and personal out-of-pocket expenditure arising from care for participants and carers at 4- and 10-months post-randomisation. Health gains and costs were reported using the General Health Questionnaire-12 and the EQ-5D-5L. Mean (CI) differences for costs and health gains were reported and uncertainty represented using non-parametric bootstrapping and cost-effectiveness acceptability curves. Results 56 participants were randomised. Mean age was 70.1 (SD 13.4). Most (n = 37, 66%) had mild and many (n = 14; 25%) severe aphasia. There was ≥94% completion of CSRI questions. Peer-befriending was higher in intervention arm (p < 0.01) but there were no significant differences in total costs between trial arms. Peer-befriending visits costed on average £57.24 (including training and supervision costs). The probability of peer-befriending being cost-effective ranged 39% to 66%. Conclusions Economic data can be collected from participants with post-stroke aphasia, indicating a full economic evaluation within a definitive trial is feasible. A larger study is needed to demonstrate further cost-effectiveness of peer-befriending.
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Keyword:
HC Economic History and Conditions; P Philology. Linguistics; RA Public aspects of medicine; RC Internal medicine
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URL: https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/27660/1/02692155211063554.pdf https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/27660/ https://doi.org/10.1177/02692155211063554
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A systematic review of speech, language and communication interventions for children with Down syndrome from 0 to 6 years
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Teaching vocabulary to adolescents with language disorder: Perspectives from teachers and speech and language therapists
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Managing ongoing swallow safety through information-sharing: an ethnography of speech and language therapists and nurses at work on stroke units
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A Systematically Conducted Scoping Review of the Evidence and Fidelity of Treatments for Verb and Sentence Deficits in Aphasia: Sentence Treatments
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Understanding and Supporting Peer Relationships in Adolescents with Acquired Brain Injury: A Stakeholder Engagement Study
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Is Early Bilingual Experience Associated with Greater Fluid Intelligence in Adults?
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Time for talk: The work of reflexivity in developing empirical understanding of speech and language therapist and nursing interaction on stroke wards
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Managing data for integrated speech corpus analysis in SPeech Across Dialects of English (SPADE)
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The social and psychological work of metaphor: a corpus linguistic investigation
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Sociolinguistic variation in the Yāl Saʿad dialect in northern Oman
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Populism, affect and meaning-making: a discoursive (de)construction of the Brazilian people
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What Are Bob and Alice saying? [Mis]communication and Intermediation Between Language and Code
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Transcribing (multilingual) voices: from fieldwork to publication
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Matched-accent processing : Bulgarian-English bilinguals do not have a processing advantage with Bulgarian-accented English over native English speech
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