Adult Dysphagia Management: Diet, Sleep Apnea, Intensive Care Unit, and Dementia
Please enter a valid quantity
Please select a product format
That product is out of stock
BEFORE YOU BUY...
This course is one of more than 750 CE courses in the ASHA Learning Pass, which gives you unlimited access to more than 1,350 hours of CE content for the cost of just one or two a la carte courses.
*If this is a recent SIG Perspectives course, you must also be a Special Interest Group (SIG) affiliate to unlock it as part of your subscription.
Already an ASHA Learning Pass subscriber?
Login
This quartet of SIG 13 articles provides information regarding managing and treating
dysphagia in the adult population. Caileen Harvey, Rachel Flemming, Julia Davis, and
Victoria Reynolds investigate International Dysphagia Diet Standardisation Initiative
implementation issues by surveying health care professionals in health care facilities in
rural Upstate New York. Ankita M. Bhutada, William A. Broughton, Brenda L. Beverly,
Dahye Choi, Sandip Barui, and Kendrea L. (Focht) Garand aim to identify the prevalence
of dysphagia and reflux reported symptoms in patients with obstructive sleep apnea
syndrome and determine associations between symptoms and demographic and clinical
variables. Stevie Marvin summarizes published research on screening, evaluating, and
treating post-extubation dysphagia in the intensive care unit. Rebekah Guastella,
Stefania Oppedisano, Luis F. Riquelme, and Ashwini M. Namasivayam-MacDonald
study bolus location at swallow onset, stage transition, pharyngeal transition duration,
pharyngeal response duration, and pharyngeal phase duration between cued and
uncued swallowing conditions in patients with dementia.
Learning
Outcomes
You
will be able to:
- identify staff-perceived barriers and solutions to consistent implementation of
International Dysphagia Diet Standardisation Initiative in a variety of care
facilities in a rural geographical area
- identify predictive risk factors for swallowing and reflux symptoms in
obstructive sleep apnea syndrome
- compare the clinical evaluations of swallowing with instrumental evaluations
for evaluating post-extubation dysphagia
- summarize the differences in swallowing physiology between cued and
uncued swallows in people living with dementia
Assessment
Type
Self-assessment—Think
about what you learned and report on the Completion Form how you will use your
new knowledge.
Articles
in This Course
- Facilitators and Barriers to Implementing the International Dysphagia Diet
Standardisation Initiative in Care Facilities in Upstate New York by Caileen Harvey,
Rachel Flemming, Julia Davis, and Victoria Reynolds, published in SIG 13, December 22, 2021
- Predictors of Patient-Reported Dysphagia and Reflux Symptoms in Obstructive Sleep
Apnea by Ankita M. Bhutada, William A. Broughton, Brenda L. Beverly, Dahye Choi,
Sandip Barui, and Kendrea L. (Focht) Garand, published in SIG 13, December 13, 2021
- Evaluation and Treatment of Post-Extubation Dysphagia: The Importance of the Speech
Pathologist in the Intensive Care Unit by Stevie Marvin, published in SIG 13, December 10, 2021
- Effects of Cued and Uncued Swallowing in Patients With Dementia by Rebekah
Guastella, Stefania Oppedisano, Luis F. Riquelme, and Ashwini M. Namasivayam-MacDonald, published in SIG 13, December 21, 2021
|