La Trobe

Elizabeth Usher memorial lecture: Beyond our practice borders—using a biopsychosocial framework to improve long-term outcomes for people living with aphasia

journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-23, 06:26 authored by Miranda RoseMiranda Rose
Purpose: Over 140 000 Australians live with aphasia after stroke, with this number of people living with aphasia increasing significantly when aphasia arising from traumatic brain injury, neoplasm, and infectious and progressive neurological diseases is also included. The resulting communication disability frequently compromises every aspect of daily life, significantly impacting everyday activity, employment, social participation, mental health, identity, and family functioning. Rehabilitation services rarely meet the needs of this group who have, for example, poorer healthcare outcomes than stroke peers without aphasia, nor address long-term recovery and support needs. Method: In this discussion paper, I argue that given the broad impacts of aphasia, a biopsychosocial approach to aphasia rehabilitation is required. Rehabilitation must include: interventions to improve the communication environment; programs that directly target identity, wellbeing, and mental health; and therapies focusing on functional activity, communication participation, and long-term self-management. Result: The evidence for these approaches is mounting and includes strongly stated consumer needs. I discuss the need for multidisciplinary involvement and argue that for speech-language pathologists to achieve such comprehensive service provision, an expanded scope of practice is required. Conclusion: There is a need to rethink standard therapy approaches, timeframes, and funding mechanisms. It is time to reflect on our practice borders to ask what must change and define how change can be achieved.

Funding

Improving quality of life in chronic aphasia: reducing depression and increasing social connection and life participation through community aphasia groups

Australian Research Council

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COMPARE- Constraint Induced or Multi-Modal aphasia rehabilitation: An RCT of therapy for stroke related chronic aphasia

National Health and Medical Research Council

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Communication Connect: Improving long term communication and mental health outcomes following stroke and brain injury

National Health and Medical Research Council

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Centre of Research Excellence in Aphasia Recovery and Rehabilitation

National Health and Medical Research Council

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This work was also supported by La Trobe University.

History

Publication Date

2023-06-01

Journal

International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology

Volume

25

Issue

3

Pagination

9p. (p. 346-354)

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

ISSN

1754-9507

Rights Statement

© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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