Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Conversation Therapy Research Group

The Conversation Therapy Research Group (CTRG) held a one day meeting at the unit on May 12th at the Bristol Speech and Language Therapy research Unit.
Left to right: Madeline Cruice (City university), Simon Horton (University of East Anglia), Sandra Wielaert (Rijndam Revalidatie), Rotterdam and the University of the West of England/BSLTRU), Wendy Best,  Firle Berkley and Suzanne Beeke (all from University College, London). Behind the camera Karen Sage (University of the West of England/BSLTRU).
The group meets regularly (usually on Skype) to share ideas and collaborate on research which aims to enable conversation assessment and therapy to become a clinical reality for speech and language therapists. What a treat to meet up face-to-face!

For more information about conversation therapy, this group and how to get involved in research linked to this, contact Firle Berkley via the Better Conversations with Aphasia website:  http://www.ucl.ac.uk/cslir/projects/ongoing/betterconversations

Filming at the Unit for the Aphasia Software Finder

Monday 12th May, Giles Edwards  and Chris Barber kindly gave up their day off to work with actress Jenny Rainsford  to help improve accessibility for the Aphasia Software Finder

Look out for the forthcoming videos on the site. What a team effort from Jenny, Giles, Chris, Sarah Woodwood, Julie Ward and Brian Petheram! 

The aphasia software finder website is funded by the Tavistock Trust for Aphasia.

Left: Chris Barber, Right Giles Edwards (giles@bowerfilms.co.uk)


Friday, 16 May 2014

Prof Sue Roulstone visits the Sound Start team in Sydney, Australia

This week Prof Sue Roulstone visited the Sound Start team in Sydney, Australia.

Sound Start is a project funded by the Australian Research Council. The project is a randomised controlled trial to evaluate the impact of Phoneme Factory software which provides interactive games to improve children’s phonological awareness. The project is into its second round of recruitment.

Pictured are the team from Charles Sturt University, led by Prof Sharynne McLeod and Dr Elise Baker from University of Sydney.

Clockwise from the left: Sarah Masso, Sue Roulstone, Kate Crowe, Elise Baker, Sharynne McLeod, Tamara Cumming, Charlotte Howland, Jane McCormack Also on the team but missing from the photo is Dr Yvonne Wren from Bristol Speech and Language Therapy Research Unit

Monday, 28 April 2014

Prof Sue Roulstone writes about her research in UWE's 'Research with Impact' website

Helping children with impaired communication skills


 Two girls talking in a classroom
Research at the University of the West of England (UWE) Bristol has reassessed services for children with speech, language and communication impairment, emphasising the perspectives of the children themselves and their families. The findings have directly influenced major policy reports, a National Year of Communication, and have improved therapy practice.

Evidence from research

Language skills are crucial to children’s development, yet impairments in these skills affect around 7% of children of primary-school age. What are the best ways to help their language development skills, and what are the priorities of their families and of the affected children themselves? Research led by Professor Sue Roulstone has provided evidence that helps answer these questions.

Perspectives of children and parents

There was already a consensus that services for children were likely to improve if their perspective is listened to. This is a particular challenge in the case of children with speech, language and communication impairment. Using non-verbal activities such as drawing, taking photographs and compiling a scrapbook, the UWE Bristol team created a supportive environment within which the children could express themselves. This made their own thoughts on their impairment explicit for the first time.

In 2007, the UK’s then Secretaries of State for Health and for Children, Schools and Families asked John Bercow MP (later the Speaker of the House of Commons) to lead a review of the services provided for children and young people with speech, language and communication needs. This review commissioned Roulstone to undertake independent research on the views of children and parents.

Roulstone’s team found that parents saw communication as central to their child’s development. They wanted well-signposted services, access to specialist resources, and a timely diagnostic process in which professionals worked in partnership with parents.

Finding the factors influencing development

How do parents’ activities with their children affect their language development? In 2011, working with colleagues from the Universities of Bristol, Newcastle and Sheffield, the UWE Bristol team analysed data from a large-population study (the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children) with which they had been involved. They found a significant link between the child’s language abilities at age two and the parents’ activities with them when they were younger. This ability level was in turn significantly linked to their performance in school entry assessments, suggesting children who develop their language early are at an important advantage.
Four children interacting in the playgroundThe research also looked in 2012 at current practice in programmes designed to support the development of children’s communication. In collaboration with the Universities of Warwick and Newcastle, Roulstone and Dr Yvonne Wren from UWE Bristol found that only 5% of these programmes were based on strong evidence; 56% had evidence from at least one trial and 39% had only face validity or were based solely on case studies.

Influencing public policy and guidance

The research had a direct influence on the report of the Bercow Review, published in 2008. As well as acknowledging and quoting from the research directly, the headings of four out of its five key conclusions reflect the findings on parents’ priorities:
  • Communication is crucial
  • Early identification and intervention are essential
  • A continuum of services, designed around the family, is needed
  • Joint working is critical
In response to the Bercow Review, the Government established a ‘Better Communication Action Plan’. As part of this, the UK national Commissioning Support Programme published in 2011 a guidance document for professionals such as those who commission services for children with communication impairments. This included, as a substantial appendix, the materials and guidance tools developed by Roulstone and her team to help the children express their perspectives. The document encouraged care professionals to use these tools to involve the children in planning their care.

The Government announced that 2011 would be a National Year of Communication. This was recommended in the Bercow Report, which had picked up Roulstone’s finding emphasising the central role of communication in children’s lives. The National Year highlighted the findings linking parents’ activities with their children in their first two years with their subsequent language skills, inviting Roulstone to present them to relevant professionals including speech and language therapists.

Several other policy documents that recommend the development of services to identify and help children with communication impairments draw evidence from Roulstone’s research. Examples at the UK national level include the Nutbrown Review (2012) and the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Speech and Language Difficulties (2013). Similarly, at the regional level in South Wales, the Aneurin Bevan Health Board ‘Flying Start’ Speech, Language and Communication Development Service drew on the research in drawing up their ‘Strategy for the Prevention, Early Identification and Intervention for Speech, Language and Communication Needs for Children’.

Influencing practice

All this has had a direct bearing on practice on the ground. Feedback confirms that speech and language therapists have introduced children’s views into their auditing process as a result of hearing about Roulstone’s research findings in this area.

The findings on the level of evidence that underpinned current therapy programmes have stimulated moves towards better evidence-based practice. The Communication Trust, a coalition of voluntary-sector organisations with expertise in speech, language and communication, commissioned Roulstone to help develop a database called ‘What Works’.

The database provides information to care commissioners, managers and practitioners on the level of evidence underpinning particular programmes and interventions, so that they can take this into account in making their selections. The site was launched in March 2013. By the end of July, there had already been over 5,000 individual registrants.

Relevant, rigorous research at UWE Bristol, via engagement with policymakers and practitioners, is helping to bring about real changes in the help that is offered to children with communication difficulties.

There are more impact stories from research undertaken at UWE available online.

This blog post is copied from UWE's website.

Thursday, 10 April 2014

Dr Yvonne Wren on ALSPAC and the Cleft Collective

Dr Yvonne Wren has been on the road this week speaking at a number of events. She was joined by delegates from the US, Finland, Sweden, Greece and throughout the UK at the recent LSCD Workshop on ‘Late Stages in Speech and Communication Development’.  Discussion was focused on s issues relating to the development of speech and communication skills in older children. Dr Wren gave a presentation on the findings from ALSPAC, a large scale longitudinal population study, and data on speech production in 8-year-olds.

Keble College, Parks Road, Oxford, UK

Dr Wren then spoke on the Cleft Collective Speech and Language Study and the plans for recruitment and data collection, to speech and language therapists from the UK and Ireland who specialise in children with cleft palate and cranio- facial disorders, at the Craniofacial Society of Great Britain and Ireland Annual Scientific conference.

For more information on these projects contact Dr Wren: Yvonne.wren@speech-therapy.org.uk

Thursday, 2 January 2014

Welcome Karen Sage - New director of BSLTRU


The Bristol Speech & Language Therapy Research Unit is delighted to welcome Karen Sage as the new Director of the Unit. Karen will take over as the Underwood Trust Professor of Language and Communication Impairment at the University of the West of England, Bristol, leading the programme of research. Karen will join the thriving research team in Bristol and will lead a programme of research on acquired language disorders. One of her first tasks in February will be to seek out a senior research fellow to help shape the programme.
Karen Sage (Left) & Sue Roulstone (right) outside the Bristol Speech and Language Therapy Research Unit
Sue Roulstone, who currently leads the children’s research programme will become the emeritus professor of speech and language therapy associated with the Unit and will continue her work alongside Senior Research Fellow Dr Yvonne Wren, currently working on longitudinal studies of children’s speech development.

What a good start to the UK’s commitment to the International Communication Project 2014!

To follow the research of Professor Karen Sage follow the Bristol Speech & Language Therapy Research Unit on Twitter or on their website

Monday, 9 December 2013

BSLTRU: helping students become evidence-based speech and language therapists

Having just finished my (Vikki Greenhalgh) first year of studying postgraduate speech and language therapy at Canterbury Christchurch University in Kent, the hot topic of ‘evidence-based practice (EBP)’ is something that has been ingrained into my way of thinking. 
 
Vikki Greenhalgh at BSLTRU
 
Throughout our EBP learning about the hierarchy of research literature and how to critically appraise a publication, I and I think several other members of my cohort developed a more critical mindset and found our questions evolving from ‘What is the evidence-base?’ to ‘How does the evidence-base inform and improve practice?’.

Given the current emphasis that the RCSLT has put on EBP in speech and language therapy in order to improve outcome measures, I was interested to read in McCurtin and Roddan’s (2012) review ‘Evidence-based practice: SLTs under siege or opportunity for growth? The use and nature of research evidence in the profession’ that SLTs in practice were finding it hard to integrate EBP into their daily practice as they experienced barriers such as ‘time’ and ‘lack of skills’.

Being an SLT of the future in a time where effective outcome measures are more important than ever, I was left with more questions than answers as to how research can enable SLTs to improve their practice.
 


Drawing on my learning about reflective thinking I decided that I needed to take Kolb’s advice and complete my ERA (experience à reflection à action) cycle. Therefore with enthusiasm and optimism on my side, I set out to find a solution to my problem. This quest led me to organise a research placement with the Bristol Speech and Language Therapy Research Unit (BSLTRU) for the last three weeks of my first year of study. Working alongside researchers who are/were practicing SLTs would be a great place for a student like me to develop my understanding of how practice and research can compliment instead of collide.


Working alongside Yvonne Wren and the team at BSLTRU has been an inspiring experience and has helped answer many of my questions around the practical applications of EBP. I am sure that every SLT practicing today can think of a valid research question, however my experience at the BSLTRU has given me an overview of how this question develops into data collection/analysis and how the findings can be disseminated to improve practice. This placement has shown me the importance of including as much professional and public involvement in your research as possible but also the challenges of achieving this objective. In order to nurture the growth of the next generation of SLTs I think that a research placement is an invaluable experience for student SLTs to gain during their studies and really recommend that other students who are interested seek out a similar opportunity.
 
Along with my invaluable experience at the BSLTRU I found the book ‘Creating practice-based evidence: A guide for busy SLTs’ edited by Corinne Dobinson and Yvonne Wren, a really useful tool when thinking about how I could go about integrating research into my practice, definitely worth a read!

Lastly, if you have time here is an interesting 5 minute talk about the challenges of client-centred EBP by Kate Malcomess  http://therapyideas.org/live/kate-malcomess-evidence-based-practice-outcome-driven-decision-making .


References

Dobinson, C. and Wren, Y. (2013) Creating Practice-based Evidence: A Guide for SLTs. Guildford: J & R Press.
Kolb, D.A. (1984) Experiential Learning: Experience as the Source of Learning and Development. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall.

McCurtin, A. and Roddam, H. (2012) Review: Evidence-based practice: SLTs under siege or opportunity for growth? The use and nature of research evidence in the profession. International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, Vol. 47 (1) 11-26. Available at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22268898