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Source: Clinical Rehabilitation
Condition: Aphasia
Education: Study

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Total 30 results found since Jan 2013.

A systematic review of mood and depression measures in people with severe cognitive and communication impairments following acquired brain injury
CONCLUSIONS: Due to the exclusion of individuals with severe cognitive and communication consequences following brain injury, no studies using self-report measures showed adequate validity evidence to recommend their use in this population. A small study using two observer-rated scales included those with severe cognitive impairments and showed satisfactory evidence that these measures can be validly used with this population.PMID:36380679 | DOI:10.1177/02692155221139023
Source: Clinical Rehabilitation - November 16, 2022 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Alexandra E Rose Breda Cullen Sarah Crawford Jonathan J Evans Source Type: research

Establishing reporting standards for participant characteristics in post-stroke aphasia research: An international e-Delphi exercise and consensus meeting
CONCLUSION: Aphasia research studies should report the 14 DESCRIBE participant characteristics as a minimum. Consistent adherence to the DESCRIBE minimum reporting standard will reduce research wastage and facilitate evidence-based aphasia management by enabling replication and collation of research findings, and translation of evidence into practice.PMID:36250530 | DOI:10.1177/02692155221131241
Source: Clinical Rehabilitation - October 17, 2022 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Sarah J Wallace Megan Isaacs Myzoon Ali Marian C Brady Source Type: research

A pilot economic evaluation of a feasibility trial for SUpporting wellbeing through PEeR-Befriending (SUPERB) for post-stroke aphasia
CONCLUSIONS: Economic data can be collected from participants with post-stroke aphasia, indicating a full economic evaluation within a definitive trial is feasible. A larger study is needed to demonstrate further cost-effectiveness of peer-befriending.PMID:35108114 | DOI:10.1177/02692155211063554
Source: Clinical Rehabilitation - February 2, 2022 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Flood Chris Behn Nicholas Marshall Jane Simpson Alan Northcott Sarah Thomas Shirley Goldsmith Kimberley McVicker Sally Mireia Jofre-Bonet Hilari Katerina Source Type: research