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Promoting Aphasics Communicative Effectiveness

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Title: Promoting Aphasics Communicative Effectiveness


1
Promoting Aphasics Communicative Effectiveness
  • By
  • Khalila Ali
  • Bethany Bucci
  • Lindsay Friedman

2
History of PACE
  • Introduced by Wilcox and Davis
  • At the ASHA convention in 1978
  • Published procedure in 1981
  • Way to reshape structured interactions between
    clinicians and clients into a more natural
    conversation form
  • Believe that it is useful for all severities and
    types of aphasia

3
Four Basic Principles
  • 1. The clinician and the client participate
    equally as the sender and the receiver of
    information.
  • 2. The interaction consists of an exchange of new
    information only.
  • 3. The client is allowed to choose the
    communicative mode.
  • 4. Feedback from the clinician is based on
    successful exchange of information and is
    characteristic of feedback from a natural
    environment.

4
Equal Participation
  • Accomplishes three important goals
  • Gives client experience with topic and turn
    initiation as sender and receiver
  • Allows the clinician to model as sender and
    receiver and model appropriate communicative
    channels
  • Gives client experience with sustaining an
    interaction with several turns on the same topic

5
The Aphasic Clientas Initiator
  • Must develop an appropriate message
  • Must consider context
  • What is new information vs. what is already known
  • Gain attention of listener
  • Self-monitor and reformulate if a lack of
    understanding is relayed from listener

6
The Aphasic Client as Respondent
  • Decode the message (receptive)
  • Evaluate comprehension of message
  • Provide feedback to initiator (expressive)
  • Response (I understand)
  • Request for clarification (Im not sure what you
    mean)

7
The Clinicianas Model
  • Clinician may modify the clients behavior
  • Enhance desired and diminish undesired
    communication techniques
  • Clinician uses communication strategies that are
    desirable for the aphasic client to use when it
    is his/her turn
  • Clinicians receiving/sending behavior has impact
    on the clients receiving/sending behavior

8
The Aphasic ClientSustaining a Topic
  • Turn taking within one topic
  • May involve several mini-turns as sender and
    receiver
  • Requires receptive and expressive behaviors
  • Clinician still has ability to serve as model

9
Example of Mini-Turn Sequence
  • Client A womanpaper.
  • Clinician A woman with the paper? contingent
    query, use of definite article to signal given
    information
  • Client No, shes...(makes a writing gesture).
    Pronominalization, repair
  • Clinician Oh, shes writing?
    pronominalization, contingent query
  • Client Yes. confirmation
  • Clinician Shes writing. confirmation

10
New Information Exchanges
  • The Model of a Pyramid of Information
  • Base is shared knowledge
  • Each level provides new information
  • Opinions, feeling, informative statements
  • Attempt is made to keep the information unknown
    to the receiver
  • The initiator hides the card
  • Large number of stimuli used
  • Stimuli changed frequently
  • Third party may choose the stimuli (friend,
    family)

11
Free Choice of Communicative Channels
  • Any available means to communicate by
  • Speaking, Writing, Gesturing, Pointing, Drawing
  • Combinations may be more effective
  • Focuses more on effective message transmission
    vs. linguistic perfection
  • Often, clients find existing abilities that help
    convey information as well as new abilities

12
Free Choice of Communicative Channels
  • Clinician should remember
  • Not to directly instruct the client to use a
    certain channel
  • Make available materials that may be necessary
    (pencils, paper, word lists, cards etc.)
  • Always serving as a model to the client
  • Model the channel you want the client to use
  • Patients are more likely to continue to use
    strategies they developed themselves over
    strategies a clinician instructed them to use

13
Feedback Based on Communicative Adequacy
  • When clinician is serving as receiver, she
    provides feedback similar to those that occur in
    natural conversations
  • Considered to have communicated successfully if
    the clinician comprehends the message (via any
    means)

14
Davis and Wilcox Recommendations
  • Clinician should provide guesses when the client
    sends an ambiguous message
  • This helps direct the clients repair
  • Clinician should respond using the same channel
    the client used to send the message
  • Client is given opportunity to evaluate
    effectiveness of channel
  • Clinician is serving as a model
  • Clinician should not instruct repairs, but
    provide typical feedback similar to conversations

15
Davis and Wilcox Recommendations
  • Clinician should maintain objectivity, especially
    with clients they know particularly well
  • Periodic use of a less familiar receiver, helps
    generalization of techniques
  • Include family members in interactions as well
  • Counseling client and family members may be
    necessary to help accept residual communication
    abilities

16
  • Important to combine the use of the 4 principles
    to provide the most effective treatment
  • Create an atmosphere where the client understands
    that conveying the message accurately is the 1
    goal

17
Adjusting PACE to Meet the Individual
  • Conversational Stimuli
  • Consider the general topic Stimuli topics should
    be interesting to client (i.e. work, family,
    hobbies, etc.)
  • Consider the symbolic representation of the
    stimuli pictures (actual or drawn), written
    material, or a combination of the two.
  • Generally, pictures are used with lower
    functioning aphasics written material with
    higher functioning aphasics.

18
Adjusting PACE to Meet the Individual
  • Consider the type of message that is represented
  • clinician will decide whether messages will
    represent multiple or single concepts.
  • (2)depending on clients level of aphasic
    impairment, clinician will determine whether
    message to be conveyed will be transmitted with a
    single word or gesture or more complex
    communicative behaviors.

19
Adjusting PACE to Meet the Individual
  • Sending Receiving Criteria
  • Generally, fewer criteria concepts are used with
    lower functioning aphasics a larger number of
    criteria concepts with higher functioning
    aphasics.
  • Specific concept criterion may influence the
    selection of the message types in the previous
    step (selection of conversational stimuli)
  • 2 ways in which in which clinician can require 3
    concepts to be conveyed about each topic

20
Adjusting PACE to Meet the Individual
  • Inform client that you both will take turns
    letting each other know 3 things about each
    topic. Specifics depend on sender since the
    message stimuli only specifies general topic.
  • (2)Present stimulus card w/ representations of
    three specific concepts. Inform client that you
    both will take turns letting each other know
    everything that is on the card.

21
Adjusting PACE to Meet the Individual
  • Depending on the level of the aphasic client,
    strategy 2 would seem easier in that the message
    conveyed is not left up to client, it is clearly
    portrayed on the stimulus card.
  • Communicative Channel
  • Due to previous formal informal testing,
    clinician should have initial impressions about
    appropriate communicative channels of client.
  • Initial channels emphasized should have been
    identified as successful communicative strategies
    for the client.

22
Adjusting PACE to Meet the Individual
  • Clinician should also be aware of the fact that
    messages can be accurately conveyed using a
    combination of modalities should encourage this
    fact.
  • Clinician Modeling
  • Clinician should initiate the PACE process by
    modeling a variety of channels.
  • Based on clients preferences, clinician should
    refine use of those channels.

23
Adjusting PACE to Meet the Individual
  • Modeling of non-preferred channels should occur
    when clients use of such channels would improve
    communication when client relies to heavily on
    a channel that may not always available.

24
Observing Communicative Change in PACE
  • In order to document clients effectiveness in
    transmitting each message, a rating scale is
    employed.
  • One scale assigns numerical values to clients
    success in communicating message when acting as
    sender or receiver (focuses on global
    turn-taking).
  • Another scale reflects the number of mini turns
    exchanged between clinician client before
    message comprehension.

25
Efficacy of PACE
  • According to Davis Wilcox (1985), pace is an
    effective treatment procedure in terms of
    improving aspects of clients communicative
    abilities.
  • Although not extensive, the group single case
    study conducted by Davis Wilcox found that
    patients made improvements during PACE phases not
    observed during treatment phases involving direct
    stimulation.
  • Improvements were noted in the role playing
    situations, and for some on the verbal subtests
    of the PICA.

26
Efficacy of PACE
  • Very few studies have investigated the efficacy
    of PACE
  • According to Davis of the few studies that did
    address efficacy, most did not incorporate all of
    the main principles of PACE during examination.
  • Ex) Some researchers did not use turn-taking as
    part of the therapy process

27
Efficacy of PACE
  • WHY have there been so few studies on the
    efficacy of PACE?
  • PACE is a functional approach to aphasia therapy.
  • It is possible that PACE is so readily accepted
    because its basic functional design is inherent
    to so many other methods of aphasia therapy.
  • Ex) In Hollands Conversational Coaching method
    (1991) the goal is also to obtain the most
    effective communication outcome but utilizing any
    verbal or non-verbal modalities possible. As in
    PACE, family and friends can be easily involved
    in Conversational Coaching intervention.

28
PACE
  • The reason the efficacy of the complete PACE
    method has never been thoroughly evaluated is
    probably because
  • PACE may be most fairly evaluated as a
    component of a treatment program, because the
    procedure is most likely to be deployed in this
    way. (Davis, 2004)

29
Criticisms of PACE
  • The principle of the PACE that does make the
    procedure very unique is the required exchange of
    novel information.
  • In many other types of intervention the clinician
    would be privy to more information than the
    client.
  • This may be the basis for one major criticism of
    PACE

30
Criticisms (contd)
  • Some do not view PACE to be representative of
    natural communication because the believe the
    client and clinician can never really be equal
    communication partners if the clinician is
    considered to have a base of professional
    knowledge of communication in general.
  • However, one of the reasons PACE is so accepted
    is because the clinician as a communication
    partner can easily (and hopefully would) be
    replaced by a family member or friend.

31
Criticisms (contd)
  • PACE has also been criticized for discouraging
    verbal behavior in communication because the
    client is encouraged to use any communication
    modality as long as the message is effectively
    conveyed in the end.
  • Davis (2004), responds to this by recalling that
    the ultimate goal in aphasia therapy is to
    increase the effectiveness of communicationusing
    any modality necessary to supplement language
    (not circumvent it).

32
Criticisms (contd)
  • Finally
  • Some believe that because the client and
    clinician are equal communication partners, the
    clinician does not retain enough information to
    supply the client with any valuable feedback.
  • However, in the spirit of natural conversation,
    the clinician is able to provide corrective
    feedback by modeling behaviors such as requesting
    clarification or more information
  • If the clients chosen communication mode in
    ineffective in transmitting a message, the
    clinician is able to alert him to that fact and
    can in turn demonstrate repair methods during her
    turn to convey a message.

33
REFERENCES
  • Davis, G.A., Wilcox, M.J. (1981). Incorporating
    parameters of natural conversation in aphasia
    treatment. In R. Chapey (Ed.), Language
    intervention strategies in adult aphasia (pp.
    169-193). Baltimore Williams Wilkins.
  • Davis, G. Albyn. 2004. Pace Revisited.
    Aphasiology. 18.
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