Motivation theory and practice in aphasia rehabilitation: A scoping review

M Biel, H Enclade, A Richardson, A Guerrero… - American Journal of …, 2022 - ASHA
M Biel, H Enclade, A Richardson, A Guerrero, J Patterson
American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 2022ASHA
Purpose: In the aphasia literature, motivation has been described as potentially influencing
rehabilitation outcomes, and there are reports that researchers and clinicians have acted to
promote it. However, studies directly investigating the range of beliefs and practices
surrounding motivation do not exist currently. The purpose of this scoping review is to
develop themes related to the beliefs and practices appearing in the recent aphasia
literature. Method: Four databases (CINAHL, PsycINFO, PubMed, and Google Scholar) were …
Purpose
In the aphasia literature, motivation has been described as potentially influencing rehabilitation outcomes, and there are reports that researchers and clinicians have acted to promote it. However, studies directly investigating the range of beliefs and practices surrounding motivation do not exist currently. The purpose of this scoping review is to develop themes related to the beliefs and practices appearing in the recent aphasia literature.
Method
Four databases (CINAHL, PsycINFO, PubMed, and Google Scholar) were searched using keywords aphasia and motivation (including derivatives such as motiv*) for articles published between 2009 and 2020. Searches returned 19,731 articles; after deleting duplicates and applying inclusionary criteria, 365 articles remained. In each article, text surrounding the term motivation was highlighted and thematic analysis was applied to these quotations.
Results
Sixteen themes were developed through thematic analysis and placed into two groups. The first group contained five themes suggesting that researchers believed that motivation should be studied and recognized the value of motivation in person(s) with aphasia when participating in research or clinical activities. The second group contained 11 themes reporting diverse beliefs and practices in how motivation is incorporated in research and clinical activities.
Conclusions
Results from this scoping review suggest that aphasia researchers, clinicians, and persons with aphasia hold beliefs about motivation that can influence clinical and research decisions. In general, beliefs and decisions related to motivation appeared to be guided by intuition rather than theories of motivation. These themes are discussed within the context of three psychological needs proposed by self-determination theory: competency, autonomy, and relatedness. Applying theories of motivation to future study in aphasia rehabilitation will guide work that can provide empirical support for these beliefs.
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