Title: REGULATION OF SLPAs
1REGULATION OF SLPAs
- By Gail Rothwell
- for the
- Washington Speech-Language Hearing Association
- WSHA
- August 22, 2007
2Roles of SLPs and SLPAs
- SLPAs work under the supervision of SLPs.
- SLPs and SLPAs treat those with communication
disorders including articulation, language,
AAC, fluency, voice, cognitive, swallow-SLPs
only. - SLPs and SLPAs may work in the following
settings schools clinics various other
medical settings.
3Credentialing and Standards
- SLPAs have no regulation in WA State via
national, state, local organizations. There are
no standards for SLPAs in Washington. SLPAs are
regulated in 35 other states. - SLPs have differing credentials including
Certificate of Clinical Competency from the
American Speech-Language Hearing Assoc. (ASHA),
Licensure from the DOH and ESA certification from
OSPI. - SLPs have a graduate degree.
4National Severe Shortage of SLPs
- ASHA reports a severe shortage of SLPs.
- ASHA and the U.S. Dept. of Labors Bureau
indicate that this is also a growing profession
as the needs grow. - OSPI reports that SLPs are 3rd in demand for
educational staff needed. - WSHA reported that there were 187 SLP vacancies
2003-2004.
5Effects of SLP Shortage
- ASHA reports unmanageable caseloads.
- ASHA reports that 10 of students have
articulation and 7 have language disorders.
Intervention increases future social and
vocational success. - Autism Society of America reports 1 out of every
150 children has autism. These students
generally need ongoing speech and language
therapy.
6More ASHA Concerns
- One in every 6 Americans has a communication
disorder and this is expected to grow with the
aging baby boomers. - Severity of caseloads is increasing.
- SLPAs are need to support SLP workloads.
- Unfilled SLP vacancies exist the needs of the
population increases.
7Positive Impact of SLPAs
- SLPAs positively impact caseload/workload of
SLPs. - SLPAs may be able to offer more therapy for some
students/clients. - SLPAs can fill in the gap of the SLP shortage.
- SLPAs provide therapy to work toward exit of
student/client.
8WSHA Seeks Licensure of SLPAs
- Lack of regulation of SLPAs No credentialing of
SLPAs locally or nationally. - Lack of supervision of SLPAs ASHA recommends
10 direct and 10 indirect. - SLPAs in Washington have differing
education/training
9Education of SLPAs
- Shoreline CC SLPA Program-2 year degree and one
year certificate - Four Washington Universities offer BA/BS degrees
- On the job training and in house classes
- May have a degree in a related field
10Consumer Protection
- Increase safety as SLPAs would be required to
work under the supervision of an SLP - SLPAs would need to follow the scope of practice
Shall not conduct evaluations, diagnoses, write
therapy plans, select clients/students, complete
official and legal paperwork, consult with other
professionals and families, etc. - Students are at risk if state mandated therapy is
not provided because of a lack of SLPs.
11Examples of Harm to the Public
- Working with too many students
- Lack of indirect and direct supervision
- Requests to perform tasks outside of the SLPA
scope of practice - Asked to do tasks without training
- Asked to work with medically fragile students and
clients - SLPAs should not treat swallow
12Efforts to Address The Problem by ASHA and WSHA
- Presentations at WSHA conventions and at the
University of Washington - Article in the WSHA Communique newsletter
- WSHA support to establish the Shoreline CC SLPA
Program - ASHA has guidelines for working with SLPAs
- ASHA and WSHA have codes of ethics that state
that appropriate credentials are needed by SLP
supervisor.
13Alternatives to DOH Regulation
- ASHA abandoned credentialing of SLPAs. However,
ASHA is exploring again. But this is a time
consuming process with an uncertain outcome. - Employer responsibility-All employers may not
enforce or be aware of the SLPA scope of
practice. - OSPI does not regulate SLPAs.
14Implications if There is No Regulation
- SLPAs without adequate training and education
will provide therapy and harm the public. - The severe shortage of SLPs makes it difficult
for SLPs to provide adequate services to students
and this service is mandated by law. - Therapy would be provided only by SLPs which is
more costly and unattainable.
15Why Licensure Not Registration or Certification
- Registration is only a database of SLPAs
practicing. - Certification is voluntary. Very few SLPAs may
apply and this will cause harm to the public. - When SLPs were certified fewer SLPs renewed their
DOH certification each year.
16Benefit of SLPA Regulation to the Public
- Standards for training, experience and education
can be regulated, enforced and monitored. - Consumers may have better billing with insurance.
- SLPAs will be able to be regulated as COTAs and
PTAs and be in more similar working environments.
17Consumer Protection With Licensure
- Scope of Practice for SLPAs will be apparent.
- Consumers will have a means to report complaints.
- Licensure will have educational requirements
including continuing education. - An SLPA will be on the Board of Hearing and
Speech. - Supervision by SLPs will be apparent.
18Regulation Of SLPAs
- Thirty-five states have regulation.
- Western states with regulation include Alaska,
California, Idaho, Oregon, Montana. - Most states require a 2 or 4 year degree in
speech-language pathology.
19HB 2372 Sponsored by Rep. Kelli Linville
- New section for SLPAs would be added to existing
law for AUDs, hearing aid dispensers and SLPs. - A 2 year, SLPA certificate or 4 year degree would
be required. - SLPA would provide service under direct and
indirect supervision of an SLP. - An SLPA would serve on the Board of Hearing and
Speech. - Grandfathering would occur.
20Education of SLPAs in Washington
- Shoreline CC-Two year SLPA program and one year
certificate On campus degree/certificate as
well as interactive TV (ITV) classes throughout
the state - BA/BS programs Eastern WA U U of W WSU WWU
21Maintenance of Standards
- SLPs would be required to supervise SLPAs.
- After grandfathering, a degree or certificate in
the field will be required. - Continuing education can be required.
- Board of Hearing and Speech would be able to
discipline an SLPA as necessary under the Uniform
Disciplinary Act.
22Organizations Involved with Regulation of SLPAs
- ASHA-Over 120,000 AUD and SLP members
- WSHA-approximately 586 members AUDs (29) SLPs
(535) SLPAs (22) - SLPA-NW-29 members and 25-30 affiliate members
23Expected Cost of Regulation
- All costs borne by the SLPAs
- There will be no cost to the public.
- SLPA salaries will remain about the same. Speech
and language therapy services expenses may
decrease as SLPAs have lower salaries than SLPs. - Medicaid has been billed for some SLPA services.
Other insurance is unknown.
24Major Functions Performed by SLPAs
- Provide therapy to students as directed by SLP.
- Support development of speech and language in the
classroom, community and vocational settings. - Produce therapy materials.
- Preparation and organization of therapy room.
25- Maintain speech files, notebooks, programs and
other forms. - Take and record data.
- Compile data for SLP.
- Schedule students and clients for therapy.
- Communicate all relevant information to the SLP.
26Summary
- SLPAs need regulation. There are no standards
for SLPAs in Washington. It is guesstimated that
at least 150 employees work as SLPAs at this
time. - Consumers are at risk with no guarantee of the
education and training of SLPAs. SLPAs may not
be adequately supervised by SLPs. - There is no continuing education for SLPAs.
- The shortage of SLPs is severe. SLPAs are needed
to support SLPs workloads and caseloads. - SLPAs should be able to migrate from other
western states. - Licensure is the level of regulation needed. It
will provide mandated supervision of SLPAs,
continuing education and disciplinary action when
needed by the Board of Hearing and Speech.