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Publication:

The Treatment of Acquired Aphasia (1994)

Author(s): Howard D

    Abstract: A number of large-scale trials have established that language therapy with acquired aphasic patients can result in significant improvement. However, such trials use a variety of different treatments with patients with qualitatively varying disorders. The group results give no information about the treatments that were effective for particular types of problem. More recent studies of treatment have examined the effects of more closely defined treatments for more closely defined disorders. Treatment based on the facilitation of word retrieval show quite longlasting effects from limited amounts of treatment, when the treatment gives either semantic or phonological information about the word, but the improvements are mostly limited to the items involved in treatment. The establishment of strategies for word retrieval based on patients' retained abilities results in more generalized improvement. The need for studies that relate analysis of a patient's disorder more closely to the process of treatment is discussed.

    Notes: Times Cited: 3 Article PT095 PHIL TRANS ROY SOC LONDON B

      • Date: 29-10-1994
      • Journal: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London Series B-Biological Sciences
      • Volume: 346
      • Issue: 1315
      • Pages: 113-120
      • Publisher: The Royal Society Publishing
      • Publication type: Article
      • Bibliographic status: Published

      Keywords: word matching tasks language treatment semantic errors retrieval speech therapy rehabilitation deficits home

      Staff

      Professor David Howard
      Research Development Professor