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Assessing and Developing Emerging Communication

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Title: Assessing and Developing Emerging Communication


1
Assessing and Developing Emerging Communication
  • Thursday 5th June 2008
  • Victoria Lundie - SLT (ACT)
  • Liz Ackroyd SLT (INRU)

2
Contacting ACT
  • Helpline 0121 472 0754
  • Website www.actwmids.nhs.uk
  • Email format Firstname.Secondname_at_sbpct.nhs.uk
  • Main phone number 0121 627 8235
  • Address ACT, WMRC, 91 Oak Tree Lane, Selly Oak,
    Birmingham. B29 6JA

3
New ACT Website
CS
4
Timetable
  • 9.00 Registration and Coffee
  • 9.30 Introduction
  • 9.45 Terminology and Client groups
  • 10.45 Tea/Coffee
  • 11.00 Assessments
  • 12.15 Lunch
  • 12.45 Goal Setting
  • 1.45 Tea/Coffee
  • 2.00 Resources and Practical Approaches.
  • 3.00 Summary and Questions?
  • 3.30 Close

5
The West Midlands AAC Care Pathway
  • Brief history
  • About the training packages
  • The documentation and how it can be used.
  • Sourcing the documentation

6
The West Midlands AAC Care Pathway
7
Learning outcomes
  • Delegates will be able to
  • Understand the terminology associated with
    emerging communication
  • Be familiar with a range of assessments
    available
  • communicate more effectively with people with
    PMLD and who are in a minimally conscious state.
  • To explore ways to develop and extend
    communication for these groups of people
  • To look at ways of recording progress effectively

8
  • Please introduce yourself and tell us who you
    work with

9
Terminology
  • Profound and Multiple Learning Difficulties
  • Minimally Conscious State
  • Vegetative State
  • Coma
  • Multi Sensory Impairment

10
Definition of PMLD
  • Complex range of disabilities
  • 1 2 of LD population
  • Profound and multiple disability referring to
    an individual who requires maximum assistance in
    all aspects of everyday life, in terms of 24 hour
    supervision. The person may have difficulty in
    communication, eating and drinking, continence
    and mobilisation, for example Wake 1997
  • Additional needs sensory, physical, emotional /
    behavioural

11
Terminology in Low Arousal States
  • Sleep/wake cycle
  • Wakefulness Brainstem
  • Arousal
  • Awareness Cortex

12
Brain Reflex Levels
  • Cortex
  • Limbic system
  • Diencephalon
  • Brain Stem
  • Spinal

Complexity
13
Recovery Continuum
  • Coma
  • Vegetative State
  • Minimally Conscious State
  • Cognitive Impaired State
  • Normal

14
Coma
  • No arousal or awareness
  • No eye opening
  • Reflexive movements only
  • No language comprehension
  • No purposeful responses
  • Rarely last more than 4 weeks

15
Vegetative State (VS)
  • Exclusion criteria
  • CANNOT be secondary to an active cerebral injury,
    degenerative condition, metabolic disease,
    infections or developmental malformations
  • CANNOT be due to the effects of sedative drugs,
    anaesthetic or neuromuscular blocking drugs

16
Clinical Features of VS
  • Medically stable
  • Spontaneous maintenance of blood pressure
  • and respiration
  • Spontaneous eye-opening
  • Sleep-wake cycle
  • May present with reflex response to stimulus
  • No localisation to pain

17
Presenting Features
  • No evidence of awareness or perception of the
    environment or own body at any time
  • No evidence of
  • communicative intent
  • comprehension
  • meaningful expression
  • No repetitive, purposeful response to a variety
    of stimuli

18
VS Prognosis
  • Longer time in VS the lower the chance of
    recovery
  • VS can persist until death or progress to MCS
  • 6 months after non-traumatic and 12 months
    traumatic injury chances of recovering awareness
    are extremely low
  • Life expectancy decreased secondary to
    compounding medical factors
  • (Multi-Society Task Force, 1994)

19
Minimally Conscious State (MCS)
  • Behavioural repertoire is severely compromised
  • Sleep/wake cycles
  • Severely limited movements
  • Feel pain

20
MCS
  • Altered awareness
  • Limited repertoire of SUSTAINABLE and
    REPRODUCIBLE behaviours demonstrating awareness
  • follow simple commands
  • yes/no responses regardless of accuracy
  • verbalisation/expression
  • purposeful behaviour

21
Problematic Presentation
  • Grasp reflex
  • Swallowing
  • Chewing and tongue pumping
  • Bruxism
  • Grunts and groans
  • Smiles and frowns
  • Relaxation response

22
Emerging from MCS
  • Functional interactive communication i.e. 6/6
    accurate yes/no responses in 2 consecutive
    sessions
  • Functional use of 2 objects in 2 successive
    evaluations
  • Can be end point of recovery or temporary plateau
    towards further recovery

23
Pre-Intentional Communication
  • The behaviour does not have a communicative
    function for the person
  • The persons behaviour sends messages to others,
    but these messages are unintentional
  • The person is not attempting to elicit a response
    from others.

24
Video
  • Video Intensive Interaction
  • Kevin title 7 chapter 1..developing eye
    contact through awareness of communication
    partner

25
Intentional Communication
  • The behaviour has a communicative function for
    the person
  • The person understands that their behaviour gains
    responses from others and that different
    behaviours elicit different responses
  • The person is sending a planned message in order
    to gain a response from others
  • Based upon cognitive ability / social experience

26
Video
  • Intentional communication
  • MENCAP video
  • Miranda
  • Francis

27
Coffee Break / Practical 1
  • Looking at the positives / negatives, challenges
    / successes of working with this client group
  • Work in small groups for 10 minutes then feedback
    to the whole group

28
  • Feedback from discussion

29
Assessment
  • What is assessment for this client group?
  • Includes looking at persons skills, experience
    and environment
  • Structured observation
  • Repeated over a period of time variable
    responses
  • Formal recording
  • Consideration of external factors / environment /
    communication partner
  • Detailed and extensive

30
Pre-Intentional communication
  • Reflexive stage
  • Reactive stage
  • Proactive stage

31
Level 1- Reflexive Level
  • Communication partner assigns meanings to a
    limited range of early behaviours, sounds and
    reflexes. These behaviours occur as a result of
    internal and external stimuli
  • Communicative partners tend to act instinctively
    to the person's behaviours
  • E.g person uses different cries when hungry or in
    pain

32
Level 2- Reactive Level
  • Social significance is assigned by the
    communication partner to a range of behaviours
  • Stimuli include events and people within the
    environment
  • The person begins to respond to affective
    messages such as tone of voice or facial
    expression
  • E.g. if a persons body stiffens this is
    interpreted as dislike

33
Level 3 Proactive Level
  • Repertoires of behaviours are now exhibited
  • Communication partners become more selective
    about the behaviour they respond to
  • The focus of attention shifts from care giving to
    objects and toys
  • The person can now take meaning from others
    facial expression and intonation
  • E.g. Clients deliberately respond to objects and
    people, and people then assign communicative
    intent to them. E.g. pursing lips and turning
    head is seen to mean dont want

34
Communication before SpeechAffective
Communication assessment (ACA)
  • Structured observation with co-operation of
    familiar people
  • Interpretation of responses to stimuli
  • Early Communication Assessment
  • Develop communication partners skills and in
    doing so reinforce communicators skills
  • Judith Coupe OKane
  • Juliet Goldbart (1998)

35
ACA
  • Stage 1 observation
  • A set of stimuli and experiences to which the
    person is already known to respond are identified
    in discussion with familiar people
  • Stage 2 identification
  • Check for consistency and quality of behaviours,
    looking at strongest behaviours (id stage 1)
  • Clusters of responses give more info than single
    responses e.g. facial movement, head movement and
    legs pulled up

36
ACA
  • Stage 3 intervention
  • As potentially communicative responses have been
    identified it becomes easier to help them to
    become effective communicators
  • Staff and carers become aware of the person's
    communication and are able to respond in a
    relevant and consistent way
  • The learner receives feedback for their own
    actions through them being treated as
    communicative

37
ACA
  • 7 aspects of interaction examined
  • Vocalisation
  • Facial expression
  • Body proximity
  • Eye contact/orientation
  • Physical contact
  • Imitation
  • Turn-taking

38
Pre-Verbal Communication Schedule (PVCS).
  • Needs to be filled in by someone familiar with
    the client.
  • Observation Checklist.
  • 27 Sections
  • Score sheet indicates areas of strengths and
    needs based on the checklist.
  • Kiernan and Reid (1987)

39
The Early Communication Assessment ECA
  • Six levels of communication
  • Lots more detail
  • Working towards intentional communication

40
Structured observations- cont
  • Individualised Sensory Environments (I.S.E.),
    Karen Bunning.
  • Assessment from Leamington Rehab hospital
  • Regular video assessment

41
Wessex Head Injury Matrix (WHIM)
  • A 62 item behavioural observation scale designed
    to assess and monitor the recovery of
    communication, cognition and social interaction.
  • Bridges the gap between GCS and standard tests of
    cognition, motor skills and dependency.
  • Provides a sequential framework and is designed
    to pick up minute changes-provides objective
    evidence of recovery.
  • Focuses on what patient does/doesnt do rather
    than clinical diagnostic features.

42
Sequences of Behaviours
  • Basic responses e.g. arousal prior to
    urination/defecation
  • Visual behaviours e.g. looks at person giving
    attention
  • Social interaction e.g. shows selective response
    to preferred people
  • Attention e.g. is able to ignore distraction
  • Orientation e.g. can say what part of the day it
    is
  • Memory e.g. knows name of one member of staff

43
SMART
  • Designed for LAS patients
  • Assesses full range of sensory modalities
  • Optimal opportunities to respond
  • Clear protocol
  • 10 assessments over 3 weeks
  • Assessment of 20-40 mins
  • Assessment and treatment tool
  • Involves family and team

44
SMART Behavioural Observation Categories
  • Reflexive responses automatic response
  • over which
  • patient has no control
  • Spontaneous response random non-
  • meaningful movements
  • that occur without stimulus
  • Purposeful response meaningful intentional
  • movement

45
SMART Sensory Assessment
  • 29 techniques
  • Multi-modal programme
  • Standardization of stimuli for assessment
  • Immediately follows Behavioural Observation
    Assessment
  • Hierarchical categorization of responses
  • Rotation of modalities

46
SMART Modalities
  • Vision
  • Auditory
  • Tactile
  • Olfactory
  • Gustatory
  • Motor function
  • Communication
  • Wakefulness/arousal

47
Hierarchical levels
  • Level 1 - No response
  • Level 2 - Reflex
  • Level 3 - Withdrawal
  • Level 4 - Localising
  • Level 5 - Discriminating

48
Levels Using Auditory Modality
  • No response no blinking or moving to
    stimulus
  • Reflex repetitive blinking startle
    response reflexive facial expression
  • Withdrawal blink then habituates
  • movement of head/eyes away from
    stimulus
  • 4. Localising movement of head/eyes
    towards stimulus

49
DifferentiatingFollowing verbal instructions
e.g. Open your eyes Give a slow blink Do
not move Press the switch once Press once for
yes Press twice for no Press for specified
letter
50
Categorization of SMART Sensory Responses
  • Consistent response
  • Occurs in 5 consecutive sessions
  • Highest inconsistent response
  • Highest response in the modality that occurs in
    1-4 sessions across assessments
  • Frequent inconsistent response
  • Occurs 5 times but not consecutively

51
SMART Levels Related to Diagnosis and Clinical
Features
52
SMART Levels Related to Diagnosis and Clinical
Features
53
AACtivity Practical 2
  • Role play
  • Use ACA observation sheet to record
  • Stimuli
  • Response to stimuli
  • Assumptions / interpretations

54
Lunch break
55
Considerations for Treatment Planning
  • Treatment mode
  • Type of stimuli
  • Order of technique
  • Position of stimuli
  • Size of stimuli
  • Type of prompt
  • Volume and pitch
  • Duration of response time

56
Considerations for Treatment Planning
  • Timing of session
  • Environment
  • Position of patient
  • Position of assessor
  • Assessor facilitation
  • Relative/carer involvement

57
Where nextGoal Setting
  • SMART goals
  • Specific
  • Measurable
  • Achievable
  • Realistic
  • Timed
  • Link to outcome measure
  • Joint target setting is vital
  • Use outcomes of assessment / observation
    schedules

58
SMART or not?
  • Phil will move more.
  • Phil will ask for a drink using sign at breakfast
    following verbal prompt.
  • Phil will help with the washing up by Christmas.
  • Phil will go out to the local shop with his key
    worker every Tuesday.
  • Phil will walk to the dining room to drink his
    tea every morning and afternoon within 3 months.

59
Where Next
  • Goals must reflect small changes
  • Requires creativity and inspiration to continue
    to identify activities to move client on.
  • Will later discuss some resources to help this.
  • Teaching Early Meanings - pre verbal

60
Practical 3
  • Case study discussion
  • In pairs discuss a client you work with referring
    to practical 3 feedback sheet in your pack to
    help guide your discussion
  • Feedback

61
Creative and Other Resources
  • Intensive Interaction
  • Scope pack
  • Objects of Reference / Sensory Objects
  • Use of PowerPoint Tony Jones (Liberator)
  • Interactive Story Telling
  • Communication Passports
  • Sensory regulation
  • Using Switches / cause effect activities

62
Intensive Interaction
63
Scope Manual
  • Useful advice / resources and handouts
  • Useful contacts references / resources / web
    addresses
  • Module 9
  • Children and adults with PMLD
  • Assessment / information gathering, chart/ form /
    aims objectives section based on
    communication before speech. Suggested
    activities
  • Functional
  • Importance of facilitators role
  • Child adult version, activities and ideas for
    switch progression

64
Objects of reference
  • These are objects that are used as a means of
    communication
  • Originally used with deaf blind individuals
  • Now used more widely with people with multiple
    impairments
  • Sensory objects of
  • reference

65
Objects of Reference
  • Categories
  • Real life objects used in an activity
  • Objects not used in an activity
  • Objects with a shared feature
  • Miniature objects
  • Abstract objects
  • MMF Meaningful, Motivating and Frequent

66
Objects of reference
  • Can be used in a number of different ways
  • As a bridge to more complex communication systems
  • To help understanding of environment
  • To help with timetabling or sequencing
  • To help people make choices

67
Use of Power Point
68
My Family
69
This is my dog Barnie
70
I love going for walk and listening to the birds.
71
(No Transcript)
72
Interactive Story Telling
  • e.g. Odyssey Now Social Cognition through drama
    and literature for people with learning
    Disabilities (Keith Park)

73
Communication Passports
  • Gives information about how client communicate
    can include pre-intentional communications.
  • Needs information from wide range of people.
  • More detail included the more useful
  • Does not have to only be on paper, can be audio,
    DVD
  • time needs to be allowed for carers to
    see/read/hear it.
  • http//www.communicationpassports.org.uk/

74
Treatment Ideas cont
  • Facilitating and harnessing communication
    potential
  • Building upon observed responses
  • Total Communication Approach
  • Written guidelines for interaction, treatment
    etc.
  • Establishing a routine sensory regulation

75
Sensory Regulation
  • What is it?
  • How do we do it?
  • Who is responsible for it?

76
What is Sensory Regulation?
  • Described within the International Working Party
    report on Vegetative State (RHND, 1996)
  • Patients can quickly become over stimulated by
    the environment
  • Optimise the sensory conditions within the
    patients environment
  • Importance of regulating noise, visual and
    tactile stimuli

77
Switches
  • A device for making an electrical connection
    between two contacts.
  • Contact switches physical contact required
    (target or held)
  • Non-contact switches movement or proximity of
    body parts

78
Switches
  • Obtain a functional position
  • Identify potential sites
  • Compare testing of these to establish which is
    most effective
  • It is important to carefully observe posture,
    reflex patterns and muscle tone while at rest and
    while performing tasks.

79
Switch skills
  • Long term goal use switch to access assistive
    technology for communication, environmental
    control, computer access or mobility
  • Skills required
  • Waiting
  • Activating
  • Holding
  • Releasing
  • Waiting
  • Reactivating

80
Cause and Effect Activities
  • Simple computer game providing changing visual
    feedback when switch is activated
  • Simple environmental control activity turning
    radio on/off
  • Remote control toy
  • Personalised PowerPoint display family photos

81
Cause and Effect
  • Monitor
  • Awareness of switch
  • Purposefulness of activation
  • Response to action after switch press
  • ?connect switch press to action
  • Repetition of switch presses
  • Motivation
  • Cessation of switch pressing during
    action/reward/end of sequence
  • Responses to visual and auditory actions
  • Understanding that switch activation causes
    effect

82
Timing and Accuracy - Activities
  • Simple computer game press switch at correct
    time to hit a target
  • Simple EC device 3 options scanned in turn

83
Timing and Accuracy
  • Monitor
  • Correct timing of switch press
  • Number of prompts required
  • Switches in response to visual and/or auditory
    cues
  • Waits and presses switch at a particular time
  • Anticipation

84
Switches and Environmental Control
  • Used as a motivational tool
  • Establishes cause and effect
  • Can indicate ability to follow verbal
    instruction, length of time to initiate a
    response and can be used to make a choice

85
How do we record share information about
operational / environmental issues..
  • Communication passport or dictionary
  • The front page in a communication book / board
  • A tag etc on wheelchair tray/arm.
  • Talking Photo album
  • A film

86
Communication PassportShow as a Power Point
http//www.communicationpassports.org.uk/ -CALL
centre website
87
Questions.
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