At a glance
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Adapting Acceptance and Mindfulness-based Behavior Therapy for Stroke Survivors With Aphasia to Improve Communication Success, Post-stroke Adaptation, and Quality of Life
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for aphasia for Stroke and Aphasia. Completed, enrolled 20 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The proposed study is a Stage I successive cohort trial intended to adapt Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) to meet the specific needs of stroke survivors with aphasia ("ACT for Aphasia"). It will do so by incorporating communication supports and compensatory speech-language treatment. The goal of developing this integrated treatment is to improve successful communication participation, psychosocial adjustment, and quality of life for stroke survivors with aphasia. In the first phase of the project, the investigators will create a treatment manual with input from a stakeholder advisory board consisting of caregivers and stroke survivors with aphasia. The investigators will then recruit an initial cohort of five stroke survivors with aphasia to undergo the initial version of the treatment based and provide feedback. This will aid revision of the manual, which the investigators will then evaluate using a second cohort of 16 stroke survivors with aphasia. The investigators predict that ACT for Aphasia will be acceptable and feasible based on measures of participant satisfaction and treatment adherence. The investigators will also measure pre- to post-treatment changes in psychological distress, functional disability, quality of life, and communication participation and functioning to establish preliminary effect size estimates for this intervention, in preparation for a subsequent Stage II efficacy trial.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
The intervention will consist of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy modified to meet the needs of stroke survivors with aphasia, combined with communication strategy training.