Distance delivery of a spoken language intervention for school-aged and adolescent boys with fragile X syndrome

Dev Neurorehabil. 2018 Jan;21(1):48-63. doi: 10.1080/17518423.2017.1369189. Epub 2017 Sep 28.

Abstract

A small randomized group design (N = 20) was used to examine a parent-implemented intervention designed to improve the spoken language skills of school-aged and adolescent boys with FXS, the leading cause of inherited intellectual disability. The intervention was implemented by speech-language pathologists who used distance video-teleconferencing to deliver the intervention. The intervention taught mothers to use a set of language facilitation strategies while interacting with their children in the context of shared story-telling. Treatment group mothers significantly improved their use of the targeted intervention strategies. Children in the treatment group increased the duration of engagement in the shared story-telling activity as well as use of utterances that maintained the topic of the story. Children also showed increases in lexical diversity, but not in grammatical complexity.

Keywords: Distance teleconferencing; expressive language sampling; narrative story-telling; parent-implemented intervention.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Child
  • Fragile X Syndrome / rehabilitation*
  • Humans
  • Language Development
  • Language Therapy / methods*
  • Male
  • Mothers / education
  • Telemedicine / methods*