International Practices of Speech-Language Pathologists Working with Bilingual Speakers with Primary Progressive Aphasia
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/37446Dato
2025-01-09Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Grasso, Stephanie M.; Gallée, Jeanne; Cartwright, Jade; Jokel, Regina; Lavoie, Monica; McGowan, Ellen; Pozzebon, Margaret; Beber, Barbara Costa; Duboisdindien, Guillaume; Montagut, Núria; Norvik, Monica I.; Sugimoto, Taiki; Townsend, Rosemary; Unger, Nina; Winsnes, Ingvild Elisabeth; Volkmer, AnnaSammendrag
Methods - A comprehensive survey containing questions regarding clinician confidence, prioritization, and ratings of basic competency for Volkmer, Cartwright, Ruggero et al.’s (2023) best practice principles was constructed with questions that also queried practices pertaining to working with bilingual populations. Data was collected anonymously, via the Qualtrics survey platform and the survey was disseminated via social media and through social networks of study team members.
Results - A total of 185 participants responded with representation from 27 countries. In total, bilingual participants spoke a total of 39 different languages. The average number of languages spoken by respondents was 1.86 (SD = 1.08). Twenty-three percent of respondents reported that they provided clinical services bilingually and 28% identified as bicultural. Respondents indicated that coursework in their training to become SLPs related to bilingual neurogenic communication disorders was covered for less than two hours (39%), less than five hours (33%), or more than five hours (28%). The majority of respondents indicated that they sometimes or typically worked with an interpreter or translator for conducting bilingual assessments (43%) or performed them independently (18%). When asked which language respondents typically assess participants in, 5% indicated the maternal language, 39% indicated the dominant/most functional language(s), and 54% indicated the language(s) the clinician felt comfortable speaking.
Conclusion - This study reports, for the first time, the practices of speech-language pathologists working with bilingual speakers with PPA. Results indicate that SLPs are likely to receive some exposure to bilingual adult neurogenic communication disorders in their training. SLPs are more likely to assess bilingual individuals with PPA in the languages clinicians speak, or in the participant’s most functional/dominant language(s). Additional international forums are needed to extend core principles and philosophies of SLP practices, particularly when individuals living with PPA speak more than one language.