Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Effect of Performance-specific Cleft Speech Intervention and Long-term Learning in Children With a Cleft Palate
Sponsor: University Ghent
Summary
Speech therapy in children with a palate deals with two scientific challenges that will be addressed in this project. The first challenge is selecting the best speech approach for a child with a specific cleft speech characteristic (CSC). Many speech therapists use a 'one-size-fits-all' approach to treat compensatory CSCs resulting in poor short- and long-term speech outcomes. To increase the effectiveness and quality of cleft speech care, it is necessary to find the best match between a specific therapy and a given type of CSC. Therefore, this proposal will compare the effect of 3 different speech approaches on the speech and quality of life in Dutch speaking children with different types of CSCs. The second challenge is selecting the best speech approach to enhance long-term learning and transfer of newly established speech skills to untrained consonants. To date, research mainly focused on immediate therapy effects. It is unknown if permanent speech changes occur. Hence, this project will also investigate the short-term and long-term learning effects (retention and transfer) of the different speech approaches from the first objective. This proposal will improve evidence-based and patient-tailored cleft speech therapy.
Official title: One Size Does Not Fit All: From a Common Approach Towards Performance-specific Speech Intervention and Long-term Learning in Children With a Cleft Palate
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
4 Years - 12 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
135
Start Date
2022-10-01
Completion Date
2026-09-30
Last Updated
2023-10-27
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Motor-phonetic intervention
Children will receive phonetic articulation therapy treating consonants in a phoneme-by-phoneme basis, emphasizing phonetic placement and shaping techniques. Phonetic articulation therapy includes a progression of the target consonant from isolated level, syllable level, word level, sentence level, spontaneous speech level in five different steps: identification of the target consonant using visual, tactile, and auditory feedback techniques, discrimination between the used and targeted consonant, (3) variation and correction, (4) stabilize the target, and (5) maintenance of the target. A next level will be introduced when the child is able to correctly produce the sound in 90% of the time with minimal cues from the therapist.
Phonological intervention
The phonological approach consists of two phases. In the first phase, the child's attention is drawn to the contrastive features of the speech sound system which are relevant to the target consonants. Terms that describe the sound features will be introduced using words on the child's level, e.g. in the case of active nasal fricatives the words 'nose' and 'mouth' will be used. Child-friendly games will be played to illustrate the contrast between the concepts followed by activities that focus on the contrasts in non-speech sounds, in which child and therapist will alternate between being listener and speaker. At the end of this phase, minimal word pairs (e.g. tap/cap), only produced by the therapist, will be used to facilitate the child's awareness of sounds in words and meaningful differences based on distinctive features. In the second phase, the child will produce minimal pairs providing the opportunity to monitor his/her speech and to make self-corrections.
Combined phonetic-phonological intervention
Children will receive motor-phonetic articulation therapy supplemented with phonological principles. Therapy will be provided following the same five steps as the 'motor-phonetic group'. However, articulation errors will not be treated in a phoneme-by-phoneme basis. In contrast, multiple errors will be targeted simultaneously by focusing on a process. For example, if the child produces glottal stops for the /t/ and the /p/, these sounds will be treated simultaneously as sounds requiring oral front placements. Exercises will be embedded in meaningful language contexts such as minimal pairs
Locations (1)
Department of Rehabilitation Sciences
Ghent, Belgium