Indices for the determination of the degree of communication skills improvement in prelingual children with cochlear implantation

En Abstract Introduction Monitoring and documenting the progress in communication skills of cochlear implanted (CI) children is important for intervention planning, conduction of evidence-based studies, and reporting parents about their children’s progress. Aim The aim of the present study was to pr...

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Main Authors: Manal El-Banna, Gamal Youssef
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2016-10-01
Series:The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.4103/1012-5574.192553
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spelling doaj-509e4eab02634f76a5ab8ca3561028822021-04-02T13:04:19ZengSpringerOpenThe Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology1012-55742090-85392016-10-0132428729710.4103/1012-5574.192553Indices for the determination of the degree of communication skills improvement in prelingual children with cochlear implantationManal El-Banna0Gamal Youssef1Unit of Phoniatrics, Otorhinolaryngology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria UniversityUnit of Phoniatrics, Otorhinolaryngology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria UniversityEn Abstract Introduction Monitoring and documenting the progress in communication skills of cochlear implanted (CI) children is important for intervention planning, conduction of evidence-based studies, and reporting parents about their children’s progress. Aim The aim of the present study was to provide reliable indices that may be used to monitor a child’s communication skills progress after CI and to grade his or her performance. Patients The study was carried out on 53 prelingual CI children (28 boys and 25 girls). Their ages ranged from 2.5 to 6 years. They were all of average intelligence and showed no associated disorders. They were all enrolled for verbal auditory training at the Unit of Phoniatrics. Methodology The CI children were evaluated postoperatively using the quasi-objective description of communicative ability, following scaling by transformation from the lower stages to the higher stages in communicative performance. This entailed the determination of the levels for auditory performance, receptive and expressive language, speech intelligibility, mode of communication, approximate language age, vocabulary size, and speech sounds perception. After 1 year of implantation, the children were re-evaluated and the levels achieved in each item and on the therapy program were recorded. The subjective impression of improvement was marked as poor, fair, or good, which was determined by the phoniatrician, therapist, and the parents for each child. Conclusion Expressive language development and speech intelligibility in the presence of marked speech perception are significant indicators for communication skills progress. The indices provided for various degrees of improvement are helpful to conduct evidence-based research, especially in the absence of reliable formal testing.http://link.springer.com/article/10.4103/1012-5574.192553cochlear implantationcommunication skillsdegree of improvementlanguageprelingualspeech
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manal El-Banna
Gamal Youssef
spellingShingle Manal El-Banna
Gamal Youssef
Indices for the determination of the degree of communication skills improvement in prelingual children with cochlear implantation
The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
cochlear implantation
communication skills
degree of improvement
language
prelingual
speech
author_facet Manal El-Banna
Gamal Youssef
author_sort Manal El-Banna
title Indices for the determination of the degree of communication skills improvement in prelingual children with cochlear implantation
title_short Indices for the determination of the degree of communication skills improvement in prelingual children with cochlear implantation
title_full Indices for the determination of the degree of communication skills improvement in prelingual children with cochlear implantation
title_fullStr Indices for the determination of the degree of communication skills improvement in prelingual children with cochlear implantation
title_full_unstemmed Indices for the determination of the degree of communication skills improvement in prelingual children with cochlear implantation
title_sort indices for the determination of the degree of communication skills improvement in prelingual children with cochlear implantation
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
issn 1012-5574
2090-8539
publishDate 2016-10-01
description En Abstract Introduction Monitoring and documenting the progress in communication skills of cochlear implanted (CI) children is important for intervention planning, conduction of evidence-based studies, and reporting parents about their children’s progress. Aim The aim of the present study was to provide reliable indices that may be used to monitor a child’s communication skills progress after CI and to grade his or her performance. Patients The study was carried out on 53 prelingual CI children (28 boys and 25 girls). Their ages ranged from 2.5 to 6 years. They were all of average intelligence and showed no associated disorders. They were all enrolled for verbal auditory training at the Unit of Phoniatrics. Methodology The CI children were evaluated postoperatively using the quasi-objective description of communicative ability, following scaling by transformation from the lower stages to the higher stages in communicative performance. This entailed the determination of the levels for auditory performance, receptive and expressive language, speech intelligibility, mode of communication, approximate language age, vocabulary size, and speech sounds perception. After 1 year of implantation, the children were re-evaluated and the levels achieved in each item and on the therapy program were recorded. The subjective impression of improvement was marked as poor, fair, or good, which was determined by the phoniatrician, therapist, and the parents for each child. Conclusion Expressive language development and speech intelligibility in the presence of marked speech perception are significant indicators for communication skills progress. The indices provided for various degrees of improvement are helpful to conduct evidence-based research, especially in the absence of reliable formal testing.
topic cochlear implantation
communication skills
degree of improvement
language
prelingual
speech
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.4103/1012-5574.192553
work_keys_str_mv AT manalelbanna indicesforthedeterminationofthedegreeofcommunicationskillsimprovementinprelingualchildrenwithcochlearimplantation
AT gamalyoussef indicesforthedeterminationofthedegreeofcommunicationskillsimprovementinprelingualchildrenwithcochlearimplantation
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