Interviews with people with aphasia: Environmental factors that influence their community participation

TJ Howe, LE Worrall, LMH Hickson - Aphasiology, 2008 - Taylor & Francis
Background: Speech‐language pathologists have been encouraged to create
communication‐friendly environments to enable the everyday participation of their clients …

Observing people with aphasia: Environmental factors that influence their community participation

TJ Howe, LE Worrall, LMH Hickson - Aphasiology, 2008 - Taylor & Francis
Background: Access to the community is increasingly being recognised as an important right
of all people. To date, most of the research on community access for people with disabilities …

Environmental factors that influence the community participation of adults with aphasia: The perspective of service industry workers

K Brown, L McGahan, M Alkhaledi, D Seah, T Howe… - Aphasiology, 2006 - Taylor & Francis
Background: The loss of language and the inability to communicate effectively as a result of
aphasia often affects community participation. Within the World Health Organisation …

Combating social isolation for people with severe chronic aphasia through community aphasia groups: consumer views on getting it right and wrong

L Lanyon, L Worrall, M Rose - Aphasiology, 2018 - Taylor & Francis
Background: Group participation has been demonstrated to have a range of benefits for
people with chronic aphasia yet the strength of empirical findings is limited by the under …

“We just thought that this was Christmas”: Perceived benefits of participating in aphasia, stroke, and other groups

A Rotherham, T Howe, G Tillard - Aphasiology, 2015 - Taylor & Francis
Background: Research on the benefits of group participation for adults with aphasia
poststroke has tended to focus on interventions led by speech–language therapists (SLTs) …

Exploring participant perspectives of community aphasia group participation: from “I know where I belong now” to “some people didn't really fit in”

L Lanyon, L Worrall, M Rose - Aphasiology, 2018 - Taylor & Francis
Background: Community aphasia groups have consistently been highlighted as a viable and
effective means of supporting people with chronic aphasia to live full lives. The multi-person …

A description of the personal and environmental determinants of participation several years post-stroke according to the views of people who have aphasia

G Le Dorze, É Salois-Bellerose, M Alepins… - Aphasiology, 2014 - Taylor & Francis
Background: People with aphasia face situations of handicap in their daily life and activities
for which they were not fully prepared in rehabilitation. Aims: The present research aimed to …

An investigation into the social participation of stroke survivors with aphasia

RJP Dalemans, LP De Witte… - Disability and …, 2010 - Taylor & Francis
Purpose. Aphasia can profoundly affect a person's capacity for social participation. The
purpose of this study is to describe how people with aphasia participate socially, and to …

Addressing the long-term impacts of aphasia: how far does the Conversation Partner Programme go?

R Mc Menamin, E Tierney, A Mac Farlane - Aphasiology, 2015 - Taylor & Francis
Background: Approximately 176,000 new individuals in the United Kingdom and Ireland are
diagnosed with stroke annually with up to one third experiencing aphasia. Qualitative …

Snapshots of success: An insider perspective on living successfully with aphasia

K Brown, L Worrall, B Davidson, T Howe - Aphasiology, 2010 - Taylor & Francis
Background: While the negative impact of aphasia has been the focus of much research, few
studies have investigated more positive examples of people living with aphasia. Exploring …