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supplemental information provided in the links below will be
updated and enhanced. Changes will be made regularly over the next
few months. Please be patient as we gradually compile this
information. We have kept all linked information on the same page
so you can more easily print it. |
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Dysarthria/Anarthria
- % intelligible, speaking rate.
Aphasia - scores on receptive and expressive language
tests.
Apraxia - motor planning/execution score on apraxia
tests
Aphonia - inability to produce voice naturally (due to a
physical impairment) and/or inability to produce voice by using a
speech prosthesis (e.g., Passy-Muir valve, electrolarynx,
tracheoesophageal puncture) due to physical disability.
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Examples
of statements regarding current status and expected course:
a) Patient has severe dysarthria due to cerebral palsy. The
condition is stable and speech intelligibility is not expected to
improve.
b) The patient has severe dysarthria due to amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis. Currently speech rate is ### (half of normal),
indicating an expected precipitous decline in intelligibility.
Speech intelligibility will continue to deteriorate. This patient
will require the use of a SGD throughout the course of this
disease.
c) The patient's aphasia is (e.g., stable & chronic,
progressive) in nature. Verbal expression is expected to (improve,
not improve, deteriorate).
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Staging
scales for speech intelligibility:
Severe dysarthria due to Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis:
Stage 1: No detectable speech disorder
Stage 2: Obvious speech disorder, intelligible
Stage 3: Reduction in speech intelligibility
Stage 4: Natural speech supplemented with SGDs
Stage 5: No useful speech (SGD only)
Severe dysarthria due to Guillian-Barre Syndrome:
Stage 1. Deterioration phase
Stage 2. Loss of Speech
Stage 3. Prolonged Speechlessness
Stage 4. Spontaneous Recovery of Speech
Stage 5. Long-term Residual Motor Speech Disorder
Severe dysarthria due to Brainstem CVA:
Stage 1. No Useful Speech
Stage 2. Reestablish Subsystem Control for Speech
Stage 3. Independent Use of Natural Speech
Stage 4. Maximize Speech Naturalness & Efficiency
Stage 5. No Detectable Speech Disorder
Aphonia due to oral/trach ventilator dependence:
Stage 1. No useful speech
Stage 2. Reestablish Subsystem Control for Speech
Stage 3. SGD Supplemented Use of Natural Speech
Stage 4. Maximize Natural Speech Efficiency, Effectiveness
Stage 5. No detectable Speech Disorder
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Language
assessment tool examples:
Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination
Western Aphasia Battery |
| Description
of a symbol assessment: |
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Rancho
Los Amigos Cognitive Levels for TBI:
1. No response
2. Generalized response
3. Localized response
4. Confused-agitated
5. Confused, inappropriate, non-agitated
6. Confused-appropriate
7. Automatic-appropriate
8. Purposeful & appropriate
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| Cognitive assessment
tools: |
Aphasia
example:
(Aphasia): Mr. Smith's attention, memory, and nonverbal
problem-solving skills are within functional limits. He sustained
attention for a two-hour evaluation, recalled how to turn on and
off a SGD (after initial instruction), and independently navigated
between two pages on a SGD. He has the attention, memory, and
problem-solving skills to use an SGD device to achieve his
functional communication goals. |
1.
Communication to enable a person to get physical needs met:
Ability
to communicate in emergency situations, directing behavior of
caregivers, advocating for him/herself, communicating with family,
friends or clergy using the telephone. |
2.
Communication to enable person to carry out family and community
interactions:
Communicating to participate in family decision-making,
communicating to participate in family leisure activities,
communicating with extended family by telephone, attending and
participating in support groups, participating in day treatment
activities. |
3.
Communication to enable person to get necessary medical care and
participate in medical decision-making:
Reporting medical status and complaints, asking questions of
medical providers, responding to medical provider's questions,
discussing choices for end of life care, communicating with
medical providers by phone. |
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Examples
of functional communication goals:
The RMRP requires the SLP to identify functional goals as part
of the assessment report. Functional goals are defined in other
Medicare guidance as stating the "level of communicative
independence the patient is expected to achieve outside the
therapeutic environment." The guidance continues in simpler
terms: Functional goals should reflect "the final level the
patient is expected to achieve, are realistic, and have a positive
effect on the quality of the patient's everyday functions.
[Medicare Hospital Manual, 446(a)(3)(A); Medicare Intermediary
Manual, 3905,3(a).]
Medicare guidance states the functional goals for speech-language
pathology treatment should be designed to achieve "optimum
communication independence." The actual level of independence
will be individualized. Medicare guidance gives examples of how
different levels of performance can be described: Ability to
communicate (a) basic physical needs and emotional status, (b)
self-care needs, (c) engage in social communicative interaction
with immediate family or friends, (d) carry out communicative
interactions in the community.
The SLP must consider functional goals as being achievable over
a period of time. Some goals may be achieved immediately, while
others can be achieved only after time passes or some training is
provided. The SLP report should identify three sets of functional
goals: immediate, short term and long term, and state the level of
training or other services required to achieve these goals.
Examples of functional goals include:
- Mr. ____ will independently communicate physical needs and
emotional status to his wife on a daily basis, as needed.
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Ms. ____ will describe her physical symptoms and ask any
questions when interacting with her physician and other health
care professionals as needed.
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Mrs. ____will engage in social communication exchanges with
immediate family and extended members in person and by use of
the telephone.
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Mr. ____ will engage in social communication exchanges with
friends at home and in other settings.
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Mrs. ____ will be able to ask questions and provide
responses in community-based transactions, such as ordering a
meal in a restaurant.
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Mr____will instruct his/her caregiver on the proper
transfer protocol for moving from wheelchair to the car.
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Direct
Selection:
- Keyboard/Display: dynamic/static, number of keys/locations
- Activation Type: touch sensitive, pressure sensitive,
adjustable
- Optical pointer, eye gaze, other (specify)
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Scanning:
- Display: number of keys, dynamic/static
- Mode: visual, auditory
- Type of Scan: linear, row-column, group-row column directed
(joystick, trackball), adjustable speed
- Switch: type (pressure, feedback), position, mount
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Encoding
Type:
- Position,
- Category,
- Semantic compaction,
- Numeric,
- Alphabetic,
- Morse code,
- Other (specify)
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Type
of Symbols:
- Tactile
- Pictures: note quality, color vs. black & white
- Symbols: commercially available, individualized
- Words, phrases, letters
- Other (specify)
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Storage
Capacity:
- Message length needed
- Need to maintain files of messages
- Number of different messages being stored or formulated
- Other (specify)
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Vocabulary
Expansion and Rate Enhancement Techniques:
- Screens or levels
- Word prediction
- Other (specify)
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| References |
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