Dysphagia in Practice: Thickening Practices, Family-Centered Care, & Early Intervention
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 collection of SIG 13 articles addresses popular topics in dysphagia care throughout
the life span regarding thickening practices, family-centered care, and early intervention.
Jane Mertz Garcia, Edgar Chambers IV, and Anna Boyer utilized a survey to re-examine
practice patterns for thickened liquids and provided a comparison of past practices with
current to provide insight into contemporary themes that have previously not been
considered. Doreen Benson and George Barnes explore the utility of a mathematical
prediction model (Bayes theorem) in dysphagia management. Samantha E. Shune,
Deanna Linville, and Ashwini Namasivayam-MacDonald address maximizing treatment
effectiveness by using an approach with family resiliency and adaptation. Drawing from
the principles of family systems theory and the biopsychosocial-spiritual framework, they
use a case study as a tutorial to explore the application of family-centered care models
to dysphagia management. Stephanie C. Cohen and Karen Dilfer focus on the definition
of pediatric feeding disorder (PFD) and the multifaceted needs of families and children in
early intervention, support for use of responsive feeding in treatment of PFD, alignment
of responsive feeding strategies with early intervention principles, and barriers limiting
access to consistent, high-quality early intervention services for children with PFD.
Learning
Outcomes
You
will be able to:
- summarize two to three findings about updated practice patterns of speech-language pathologists for thickened liquids in clinical practice
- state two clinical applications of calculating the statistical probability of
developing pneumonia that may help improve outcomes
- list at least two unique strategies or tools to implement in
assessment/treatment when managing dysphagia from a more wholistic
perspective
- list three characteristics of family-centered treatment of pediatric feeding
disorder in early intervention
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
- Perspectives of Speech-Language Pathologists About Customary Practices, Knowledge
of Thickening Process, and Quality Control of Thickened Liquids by Jane Mertz Garcia,
Edgar Chambers IV, and Anna Boyer, published in SIG 13, Volume 7, Issue 3,
June 13, 2022
- To Thicken or Not to Thicken: Exploring the Use of Math-Based Clinical Decision Making
by Doreen Benson and George Barnes, published in SIG 13, Volume 7, Issue 3,
June 13, 2022
- Integrating Family-Centered Care Into Chronic Dysphagia Management: A Tutorial by
Samantha E. Shune, Deanna Linville, and Ashwini Namasivayam-MacDonald, published in SIG 13, Volume 7, Issue 3,
June 13, 2022
- Pediatric Feeding Disorder in Early Intervention: Expanding Access, Improving
Outcomes, and Prioritizing Responsive Feeding by Stephanie C. Cohen and Karen Dilfer, published in SIG 13, Volume 7, Issue 3,
June 13, 2022
|