An evaluation of a speech and language therapy eating, drinking and swallowing service for adults with intellectual disability

IF 0.5 Q4 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Angela Crocker, Jill Titterington, Michelle Tennyson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose

This study aims to evaluate the quality of a speech and language therapy (SLT) swallow service provided to adults with intellectual disability (ID) by exploring the process and outcome factors; to explore the process of what is done to and for the patient including identifying dysphagia, choking and pneumonia risk, typical interventions and management; examine clinical outcomes; and explore the relationship of outcomes with risk factors, satisfaction with the service and the impact of the service on the number of choking incidents and admissions to acute hospital with swallow concerns.

Design/methodology/approach

There were three specific work packages: (1) collecting and scrutinising patient data from the clinical record for adults with ID referred to the SLT swallow service over a six-month period. The researcher created aims, defined the limits to achieve the aims, designed a standardised data collection form, set out where data was in the clinical record, piloted, set limits for collection and trained reviewers; (2) gathering experience and satisfaction surveys from patients, caregivers and referrers over the six-month study period; and (3) monitoring choking adverse incident reports and hospital admission with swallow concerns for the whole ID population.

Findings

Choking and hospital admission were the main reasons for referral, and pneumonia risk significantly predicted dysphagia impairment. The research highlighted common dysphagia risk factors, interventions and recommendations for this population. The SLT swallow service is a quality service that is highly valued by patients, their caregivers and referrers. The service achieves significant clinical improvements, helps identify dysphagia and provides management to reduce associated risks.

Research limitations/implications

This study found common dysphagia risk factors, interventions and recommendations; it also found that the therapy outcome measures/Royal College of Speech and Language Therapy online outcome tool was a meaningful outcome measure, and that pneumonia risk significantly predicted dysphagia impairment, all of which could inform the identified dysphagia research priorities for this population.

Practical implications

Naming usual care in treatment and recommendations could help ensure a fair service and could help form quality indicators. People with ID, their caregivers and staff generated valuable ideas for improvement, and further involvement work could create a logic model for the service. Other future work could explore the use of screening tools, increase multidisciplinary team working, improve access to instrumental assessments, raise awareness of swallowing and promote important oral health and medication reviews. By using this information to shape quality improvement work and policies, one can work toward addressing high health-related inequalities and preventable deaths associated with dysphagia in this vulnerable population.

Social implications

It may be useful to raise awareness that adults with ID age earlier and that one should not exclude them from older people’s services because of an age threshold, often set higher than their life expectancy. This study highlighted a possible inequality of access issue for adults with ID who do not have direct care or day care staff. There is a need to increase access to awareness training so caregivers and general practitioners can recognise swallow difficulties and know how to make a referral for a swallow assessment.

Originality/value

Overall, the evaluation of the swallow service to adults with ID suggests that SLT have a quality service for adults with ID that is highly valued and provides significant clinical improvements. By building on these strengths, SLT could extend the reach, influence and impact of their services to help those adults with ID who have emerging swallow difficulties or who do not access the service.

评估为智障成人提供的饮食和吞咽言语治疗服务
目的本研究旨在通过探讨过程和结果因素,评估为智障成人提供的言语和语言治疗(SLT)吞咽服务的质量;探讨为患者提供服务的过程,包括识别吞咽困难、窒息和肺炎风险、典型干预和管理;检查临床结果;探讨结果与风险因素的关系、对服务的满意度以及服务对窒息事件和因吞咽问题入住急症医院人数的影响。设计/方法/途径有三个具体的工作包:(1)从临床记录中收集并仔细检查六个月内转诊到 SLT 吞咽服务的智障成人患者数据。研究人员制定了目标,确定了实现目标的范围,设计了标准化的数据收集表格,规定了数据在临床记录中的位置,进行了试点,设定了收集范围,并对审查人员进行了培训;(2)在为期六个月的研究期间,收集患者、护理人员和转介者的经验和满意度调查;以及(3)监测整个智障人群的窒息不良事件报告和因吞咽问题入院的情况。研究结果窒息和入院是转介的主要原因,肺炎风险可显著预测吞咽障碍。研究强调了该人群常见的吞咽困难风险因素、干预措施和建议。SLT 吞咽服务是一项优质服务,受到患者、其护理人员和转介人的高度评价。这项研究发现了常见的吞咽困难风险因素、干预措施和建议;研究还发现,治疗结果测量/英国皇家言语和语言治疗学院在线结果工具是一项有意义的结果测量,肺炎风险可显著预测吞咽困难损伤,所有这些都可为确定的吞咽困难研究重点提供信息。实际意义在治疗和建议中命名常规护理有助于确保服务的公平性,并有助于形成质量指标。智障人士、其护理人员和工作人员提出了宝贵的改进意见,进一步的参与工作可以为服务创建一个逻辑模型。未来的其他工作可以探索筛查工具的使用、加强多学科团队合作、改善工具评估的使用、提高吞咽意识以及促进重要的口腔健康和药物审查。通过利用这些信息来制定质量改进工作和政策,我们可以努力解决这一弱势群体中与吞咽困难相关的严重健康不平等和可预防的死亡问题。社会影响提高人们对智障成年人提前衰老的认识可能是有益的,我们不应该因为年龄门槛(通常比预期寿命更高)而将他们排除在老年人服务之外。本研究强调了对于没有直接护理人员或日间护理人员的智障成年人来说,可能存在使用服务不平等的问题。总之,对智障成人吞咽服务的评估表明,SLT 为智障成人提供的优质服务得到了高度评价,并显著改善了临床状况。通过利用这些优势,SLT 可以扩大其服务范围、影响力和作用,以帮助那些新出现吞咽困难或没有获得服务的智障成人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Tizard Learning Disability Review
Tizard Learning Disability Review EDUCATION, SPECIAL-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
16.70%
发文量
20
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