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Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa
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Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter

Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D.University of Iowa

Page 2: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Clinical Questions

• What causes stuttering?

• Is the child stuttering or normally disfluent?

• Will the child outgrow stuttering?

• What treatment options are available for school-aged children (elementary through high school?)

Page 3: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Clinical Questions

• Should therapy be direct or indirect?

• What approaches are best for young, preschool children?

• What do we need to know about teenagers? What ‘extras’ may help teens to make changes?

Page 4: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

What Causes Stuttering?

Page 5: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

What Do We Know About Early Stuttering ?

• Onset of stuttering typically between 2-4 years of age

• Probability of stuttering onset decreases with age

• Lifetime incidence (in USA and Western Europe) approximately 4-5% of the population

Page 6: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

• Prevalence ranges from 0.5% to 1%

• Estimates of unassisted recovery or remission range from 32%-89%

• Stuttering runs in families

• More boys than girls develop chronic stuttering problems (3:1)

Page 7: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Theories of Stuttering Onset and Development

Diagnosogenic Theory (Johnson)

Communicative Failure/Anticipatory struggle (Bloodstein)

Demands and Capacities Model (Andrews & Harris, 1964; Adams, 1990)

Interaction Theory (Conture, 2001)

Communicative/Emotional Model (Conture, Walden, Karrass, Arnold, Hartfield & Schwenk, 2005).

Multifactorial Model (Smith & Kelly, 1997)

Page 8: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

In essence, there is no core factor(s) necessary for stuttering to

emerge or persist in young children

Page 9: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Rather, stuttering results from the complex interaction of a number of risk

factors

Page 10: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Factors include:

*heredity *speech motor function

*language *temperament

*cognition *environment

*communicative context

Page 11: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Is the Child Stuttering or Normally Disfluent?

Page 12: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Question 1: Isthe child

stuttering,or at risk forstuttering?

Question 3: Istherapy warrantedand recommended?

Objective 1: Describe andmeasure speech

(dis)fluency

Objective 2: Determinechild’s beliefs and attitudes

about talking

Objective 3: Interview

the parents

? ??Question 2: Will the

child experiencerecovery from

stuttering; will he“outgrow” it?

Objectives 1, 2 & 3

Answers to Questions 1 & 2

Page 13: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

CONSIDER STUTTERING WITHIN THE CONTEXT OF FLUENCY AND

DISFLUENCY

FLUENCY:The smooth transitioning between sounds, syllables, and words

DISFLUENCY:A disruption in this process

Page 14: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

CHARACTERIZING DISFLUENT BEHAVIOR

BETWEEN-WORD (aka “Other” Disfluencies; Yairi et al., 1999)

• Interjections

• Revisions

• Phrase repetitions

Page 15: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

CHARACTERIZING DISFLUENT BEHAVIOR, (cont.)

WITHIN-WORD (aka “Stuttering-Like” Disfluencies; Yairi et al, 1999).

• Sound/syllable repetitions

• Sound prolongations(audible and inaudible)

• Monosyllabic whole-word repetitions

Page 16: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

STUTTERING IS A FORM OF SPEECH DISFLUENCY CHARACTERIZED BY A RELATIVELY HIGH PROPORTION OF

WITHIN-WORD SPEECH DISFLUENCIES AND ASSOCIATED BEHAVIORS

Page 17: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

…AND

LISTENERS MORE FREQUENTLY JUDGE WITHIN-WORD DISFLUENCIES TO BE ‘STUTTERING’ OR ‘ATYPICAL’ AS COMPARED TO BETWEEN-WORD DISFLUENCIES.

Page 18: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

MEASUREMENT OF DISFLUENCY AND RELATED BEHAVIOR

Frequency of speech disfluency

Relative proportion of disfluency types(within and between)

Duration of within-word speech disfluencies

Associated (non) speech disfluencies

Page 19: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

MEASUREMENT OF DISFLUENCY AND RELATED BEHAVIOR

Severity

Speech Rate (overall and articulatory)

Awareness and Emotionality

Attitudes About Speaking and Stuttering

Page 20: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Will the Child Outgrow Stuttering?

Page 21: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Patterns of Unassisted Recovery

• Probability of recovery highest from 6-36 months post onset

• Majority of children recover within 12-24 months post onset

• Period of recovery marked by steady decrease in sound/syllable and word repetitions and prolonged sounds over time, beginning shortly after onset

Page 22: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

• Relatively brief beginning and ascending phase, and a relatively long declining phase

• Subgroup of children presenting with “severe” stuttering at onset, with frequency of behaviors peaking at 2-3 months post onset and full recovery seen by 6-12 months

Page 23: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

• Described by Yairi and associates (1992,1999, 2005), and others (Conture, 2004; Pellowski & Conture, 2002; Zebrowski, 1991)

• Onset before age 3

• Female

• Measurable decrease in sound/syllable and word repetitions, and sound prolongations, overtime, observed relatively soon post-onset

Recovery Predictors

Page 24: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

• No family history of stuttering or a family history of recovery

• No coexisting phonological problems (and possibly language and cognitive problems?)

****ALL ARE PROBABILITY INDICATORS****

Page 25: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Indirect

Monitoring

Parent counseling

Providing models of specific speech characteristics with NO overt or deliberate attention paid to the child’s speech or speech disfluency.

Page 26: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

What are the Options for Treatment?

What Treatment Approaches are Available?

Page 27: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

The Pre-School Child Who Stutters

Page 28: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

We suspect that a child is either stuttering or at risk for developing a stuttering problem if (s)he meets BOTH of the following criteria:

• Produces THREE (3) or more WITHIN-WORD speech disfluencies per 100 words of conversational speech (i.e., sound/syllable repetitions and/or sound prolongations)

• Parents and/or other people in the child’s environment express concern that the child either stutters or is a stutterer.

• After Johnson, Williams, Conture and others

Page 29: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)(Millard, Nicholas & Cook, 2008)

• Rooted in “multifactorial” model of early stuttering

•Collaborative, flexible approach tailored to individual family

•Stuttering is openly discussed and acknowleged with child

• Tools based on (a) child assessment, (b) parent interview, and (c) guided observation of videotaped parent-child playto determine physiological, linguistic, environmental orpsychological factors

Page 30: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)(Millard, Nicholas & Cook, 2008)

Session 1

- Clinician feedback from evaluation and ‘discovery’ while watching videotape.

- Management and Interaction tools are chosen.

- “Special Time” is negotiated.

Page 31: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)(Millard, Nicholas & Cook, 200

Session 1

Management Tools:

managing child and parent anxiety about stuttering

coping with sensitive children

confidence building

behavior management (e.g. sleeping, eating,turn-taking, tantrums, etc.)

Page 32: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)(Millard, Nicholas & Cook, 200

Session 1

Interaction Tools:

Reduce speech rate;

Increase duration of turn-taking pauses;

Reduce amount of talking and length/complexityof utterances;

Decrease language demands (i.e. vocabulary, grammar,amount of talking, “performance” requests)

Page 33: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Parent reduces “time pressure” in daily routine, and “communicative time pressure” in verbal interaction with child

Decrease time pressure in daily life

Page 34: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)(Millard, Nicholas & Cook, 200

Session 1

Interaction Tools During Play:

Follow child’s lead during play and verbalinteraction (less physically active role);

Reduce instructions and questions (use commentsinstead);

Maintain attention with eye contact, showing interest,encouragement and praise

Reduce language demands (i.e. vocabulary, grammar,amount of talking, “performance” requests)

Page 35: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)(Millard, Nicholas & Cook, 2008)

Session 2

Videotape parent-child play and observe use of selected interaction tools and their effectiveness;

Parent taught to observe relationship between child “stressors” (internal and external) and fluency, and modifies/manipulates when possible

Provide feedback sheets and schedule weekly parentvisits

Page 36: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Lidcombe(Onslow,Packman & Harrison, 2003)

Australian Stuttering Research Center

Parent provides treatment following training by clinician

Spontaneous fluency is reinforced, instances of stuttering are highlighted through parent request to “say it easy.” (Similar to ‘cancellation?’) Ratio of praise to request for “do-over” @ 5:1

Page 37: Intervention Principles for Working with Preschool Children who Stutter Patricia M. Zebrowski, Ph.D. University of Iowa.

Lidcombe (cont’d)

Parent provides treatment in daily intervals of increasing length and communicative complexity.

Parents taught to rate stuttering frequency and severity, and keep daily ratings of each for self and clinician.