What people with aphasia want: Their goals according to the ICF
about
Uncovering treatment burden as a key concept for stroke care: a systematic review of qualitative researchWhat do people with aphasia want to be able to say? A content analysis of words identified as personally relevant by people with aphasia.The efficacy of outpatient and community-based aphasia group interventions: a systematic review.Systematic review of the quality of clinical guidelines for aphasia in stroke management.The use of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health to understand the health and functioning experiences of people with chronic conditions from the person perspective: a systematic review.Crosswalk of participation self-report measures for aphasia to the ICF: what content is being measured?Experiences of participation in goal setting for people with stroke-induced aphasia in Norway. A qualitative study.Social participation in working-age adults with aphasia: an updated systematic review."I've got somebody there, someone cares": what support is most valued following a stroke?Reviewing the quality of discourse information measures in aphasia.Communication partner training for health care professionals in an inpatient rehabilitation setting: A parallel randomised trial.Speech pathology services for people with aphasia: what is the current practice in Singapore?An exploratory investigation of the daily talk time of people with non-fluent aphasia and non-aphasic peers.Technology-Based Rehabilitation to Improve Communication after Acquired Brain Injury.Supporting autonomy for people with aphasia: use of the Life Interests and Values (LIV) Cards.Changing practice: implications of the World Report on Disability for responding to communication disability in under-served populations.The World Report on Disability as a blueprint for international, national, and local aphasia services.A qualitative study of legal and social justice needs for people with aphasia.The perspectives of adults with aphasia and their team members regarding the importance of nine life areas for rehabilitation: a pilot investigation.Living with aphasia: three Indigenous Australian stories.'You needed to rehab … families as well': family members' own goals for aphasia rehabilitation.Using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health to identify outcome domains for a core outcome set for aphasia: a comparison of stakeholder perspectives.How do speech-and-language therapists address the psychosocial well-being of people with aphasia? Results of a UK online survey."Well it has to be language-related": speech-language pathologists' goals for people with aphasia and their families.The lived experience of engaging in everyday occupations in persons with mild to moderate aphasia.Evaluating the effectiveness of intervention in long-term aphasia post-stroke: the experience from CHANT (Communication Hub for Aphasia in North Tyneside).The first 3-months post-stroke: what facilitates successfully living with aphasia?"Making a good time": the role of friendship in living successfully with aphasia.The novel language-systematic aphasia screening SAPS: screening-based therapy in combination with computerised home training.Quality and readability of English-language internet information for aphasia.Occupational performance coaching for stroke survivors: a pilot randomized controlled trial protocol.Speech pathologists' experience of involving people with stroke-induced aphasia in clinical decision making during rehabilitation.Which outcomes are most important to people with aphasia and their families? an international nominal group technique study framed within the ICF.English adaptation, international harmonisation, and normative validation of the Language Screening Test (LAST)Adjustment processes in chronic aphasia after stroke: Exploring multiple perspectives in the context of a community-based interventionInformal aphasia assessment, interaction and the development of the therapeutic relationship in the early period after strokeA “novel” reading therapy programme for reading difficulties after a subarachnoid haemorrhageA multiple-case study of a family-oriented intervention practice in the early rehabilitation phase of persons with aphasiaTurning the tide: Putting acute aphasia management back on the agenda through evidence-based practiceFunctionally relevant items in the treatment of aphasia (part I): Challenges for current practice
P2860
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P2860
What people with aphasia want: Their goals according to the ICF
description
wetenschappelijk artikel
@nl
наукова стаття, опублікована в листопаді 2010
@uk
name
What people with aphasia want: Their goals according to the ICF
@en
What people with aphasia want: Their goals according to the ICF
@nl
type
label
What people with aphasia want: Their goals according to the ICF
@en
What people with aphasia want: Their goals according to the ICF
@nl
prefLabel
What people with aphasia want: Their goals according to the ICF
@en
What people with aphasia want: Their goals according to the ICF
@nl
P2093
P1433
P1476
What people with aphasia want: Their goals according to the ICF
@en
P2093
Alison Ferguson
Bronwyn Davidson
Linda Worrall
Penny Rogers
Sue Sherratt
P304
P356
10.1080/02687038.2010.508530
P577
2010-11-29T00:00:00Z