Purpose: Communication between patients and clinicians influences the development of therapeutic relationships. Communication is disrupted when the patient has communication impairments after stroke. However, how these communication disruptions influence therapeutic relationships is not well-understood. This qualitative metasynthesis explores the perspectives of people with communication impairment to understand how interpersonal communication influences therapeutic relationships. Material and methods: Four databases were searched for qualitative studies which discussed how communication influenced therapeutic relationships from the perspectives of people with aphasia, dysarthria or apraxia of speech. Additional papers were identified through citation searching and subject experts. Nineteen eligible papers were included and analysed using thematic analysis. Results: Four themes were constructed from the analysis: (1) Relationships provide the foundation for rehabilitation; (2) Different relational possibilities arise from "reading" the clinician; (3) Creating therapeutic relationships through validating interactions and connections; and (4) Creating therapeutic disconnections through invalidating, exclusionary interactions. Conclusions: A therapeutic relationship develops, at least in part, in response to the clinician's communication and how this is received and experienced by the patient. Understanding the characteristics of relationship-fostering communication and knowing how communication influences relationships can help clinicians critically reflect on their communication and better develop therapeutic relationships with people with communication impairment.
ä IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATIONPractitioner-patient communication can facilitate therapeutic relationships or create therapeutic disconnections. Communication patterns that are commonly evident when a patient has communication impairments can impede therapeutic relationships. Clinicians need to attend to how their communication is received and how it influences people's sense of self. Communication partner training should address the existential and relational needs of people with communication impairment after stroke.
When a child acquires a spinal cord injury or disorder (SCI/D), they are faced with sudden onset of changes. Engagement in education, play, and leisure is immediately impacted. Using survey methodology, return to school for children in kindergarten through fifth grade following SCI/D was examined. Families at a large spinal cord rehabilitation center for the pediatric population on the East Coast of the United States were surveyed via email about their child's return to school to understand support and barriers a child faces when returning to school following SCI/D. Survey findings indicated that children face barriers related to school access, transportation, and educational support upon return to school. The primary barrier identified was access to educational support. Using survey findings, an in-clinic outpatient return-to-school recommendation form was developed to bridge the gap between medical model therapists and school staff that is specific to each child's needs. The curriculum is being developed to support families and therapists in preparing a child to return to school following SCI/D and to educate families to advocate for their child in the school setting. Future recommendations include further research regarding the placement of children in the school environment following SCI/D.
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