Speech Sound Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Efficacy of an Intervention for the Children With Severe Speech Sounds Disorders
Speech sound disorders (SSDs) is one type of communication problems in children. It is a
board term describing different difficulties that impact speech intelligibility. There are
different types of SSDs, including motor-based disorders (e.g., dysarthria and childhood
apraxia of speech [CAS]), structurally based disorders (e.g., cleft-palate),
syndrome/condition-related disorders (e.g., Down), sensory-based conditions (e.g., hearing
loss), and idiopathic in nature.
Among different types of SSDs in children, childhood apraxia of speech (CAS) is a type of
motor speech disorders with symptom complex, and is always considered as severe SSDs if
objective measurement of severity, percentage of consonant correct (PCC) is applied.
Evidence of different intervention approaches of CAS and SSDs have been obtained from
English-speaking children. This is unknown if these approaches can be applied to languages
which are different from English in terms of the sound inventory and prosody.
A treatment program for Cantonese-speaking children with childhood apraxia of speech was
studied. Preliminary positive findings were obtained from two participants in an ABA
single-case study. With the preliminary positive data, a higher level of evidence could be
obtained from group study. The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy of the
proposed intervention for children with severe SSDs by quasi-experimental design.
A treatment program for children with severe SSDs, especially childhood apraxia of speech
(CAS), a type of motor speech disorders in children was proposed. The program includes
syllable repetition tasks and training of core vocabularies. In the syllable repetition
tasks, children are required to repeat nonsense syllables three to five times according to
their sequencing abilities. This flexibility training of syllables was believed to address
the underlying speech motor deficits of children with severe SSDs. The level of difficulty is
increased in a systematic way to help progression of children speech skills. In the training
of core vocabulary, ten vocabularies which have high functional values in children's daily
communication were proposed by parents. Speech therapists are instructed to prioritize the
vocabularies and practice the children with the application of Principle of Motor Learning
(PML) and Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing (DTTC).
Preliminary positive findings were obtained from two participants in an single-case study.
The results showed that the treatment program was able to increase the number of syllable per
words, increase the speech sound accuracy, increase the complexity of syllable structure, and
increase speech intelligibility.
A quasi-experimental one-group pre- and post-test design will be conducted to study the
efficacy of the proposed treatment. A power calculation has been used to determine the number
of participants to be recruited. Preliminary findings of the proposed treatment program was
obtained. One of the two participants demonstrated statistically significant differences with
medium effect size. Based on this, with the estimated medium effect size (d =0.6) with .05
alpha error probability and 0.8 power (1-beta error probability), a total of 19 participants
are required.
Twenty children aged between 3 to 18 will be recruited. The specific inclusion criteria of
the participants are set as follow:
1. Cantonese as the main language input
2. No oral structural abnormality
3. No hearing loss
4. No diagnosis of Autism Spectrum Disorders
5. No major behavioral problem
Pre-treatment assessment and baseline probes:
Pre-treatment assessment will be implemented to all participants. The assessment protocol
proposed by Wong (2017) will be used. The assessment protocol consists of case history
taking, collecting speech sample, standardized language assessment, standardized speech
screening, non-standardized motor speech assessment, hearing screening, tone identification
test, and observation of suprasegmental features.
A specially designed word list will be used to take the baseline data for all children about
their number of syllable in words, speech sound accuracy, complexity of phonotactic
structure. Speech intelligibility will be measured by percentage of consonant correct (PCC)
in the children's 15-minutes speech sample.
CAS diagnosis:
After the assessment, the speech therapists will make a diagnosis of CAS if applicable and
plan the treatment goals for the children. The speech therapists will make a CAS diagnosis if
the children show all 29 diagnostic clinical features of CAS proposed by Wong (2017). For
planning treatment, the speech therapists will select stimuli for the syllable repetition
task and discuss the core vocabularies with the parents for training.
Intervention:
Each participant will be allocated one or two trained speech therapists for all treatment
sessions. All participants will receive the 45-minute sessions, twice a week for six weeks
for a total of 12 treatment sessions. All the sessions will be video-recorded for measurement
of treatment fidelity. The detail of the treatment protocol was documented in Wong (2017).
In-session probes:
Speech therapists will require the children to produce the word lists at the end of every six
sessions of treatment. Two probe sessions will be taken after the practice at 6th and 12th
session.
Post-treatment evaluation:
All children will be required to produce the specially designed words lists and be collected
a 15-minute speech sample by speech therapists one week after the end of 12th treatment
session to document the post-treatment performances in term of the number of syllable in
words, speech sound accuracy, phonotactic complexity and speech intelligibility.
Data Analysis:
The pre- and post-treatment differences of the percent correct of the speech sound accuracy
and speech intelligibility will be compared by the Wilcoxon Signed-Rank Test. It is
hypothesized that the treatment group will show significant improvement on the two outcome
measures after intervention.
The inter-rater and intra-rater reliability of the judgement on CAS diagnosis will be
analysed by Cohen's kappa. The assessor and the video-viewer will re-view 20% of the videos
that were viewed for CAS diagnosis one month later to determine the intra-rater reliability.
Another 20% of the rated data will be randomly selected to compare and determine the
inter-rater reliability.
A training workshop will be given to the speech therapists who will provide intervention for
the children prior to the start of intervention. A checklist will be used to measure the
fidelity of the intervention. The measures consist of 1) application of the program
structure, including, timing, sequences and content of the tasks, and 2) application of the
cueing hierarchy, provision of feedback and the proposed practice amount. Two independent
speech therapists will randomly view 20% of all treatment sessions and rate the fidelity by
the checklist. The intra-rater and inter-rater reliability of the rating will be measured by
Cohen's kappa.
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