
pmid: 16564054
A foundation principle of professionalism is listening carefully to clients' needs. This paper reviews current studies that have sought to listen to the needs of people with aphasia and their families. The preliminary evidence to date suggests that people with aphasia have goals that cover the bio-psycho-social spectrum but place a lot of importance on functional outcomes such as participation in life's activities, relationships, and personal self-esteem. In contrast, descriptions of current aphasia management practices reflect a predominantly medical model approach that emphasizes impairment-level goals. This paper suggests that a proportion of speech-language pathologists are not truly listening and responding to their clients' needs. This leads to a mismatch between the therapists' and clients' goals in therapy. The concept of person-centred goal-setting is described. This may contribute to greater alignments of goals and better outcomes of rehabilitation.As a result of reading this work, the participant will be able to: (a) have knowledge of criticisms of aphasia therapy by people with aphasia; (b) understand the concept of person-centred goal-setting; (c) understand the complexity of mismatched goals between therapist and client.
730111 Hearing, vision, Speech-Language Pathology, Rehabilitation, 321025 Rehabilitation and Therapy - Hearing and Speech, 401, Linguistics, Professional Practice, Applied Linguistics, Management, C1, Aphasia Therapy, speech and their disorders, Humans, Goals, Needs Assessment
730111 Hearing, vision, Speech-Language Pathology, Rehabilitation, 321025 Rehabilitation and Therapy - Hearing and Speech, 401, Linguistics, Professional Practice, Applied Linguistics, Management, C1, Aphasia Therapy, speech and their disorders, Humans, Goals, Needs Assessment
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