This study examines facilitated communication as it was experienced by three people who
were affected by acquired brain injury.
Facilitated communication is a type of augmentative communication purported to allow
persons with a severe communication impairments to communicate. The assumption is
made that people with global apraxia can communicate if given physical support. The
technique usually involves a facilitator providing physical support to the arm, hand or
elbow of the person with the severe communication impairment to assist them to point to
objects, pictures, printed letters and words or to a keyboard. Facilitated communication is
a controversial method because it is difficult to establish the existence, or extent of the
facilitator's influence in the communication of the person with a disability.
Although much of the research on facilitated communication has been conducted with
people with intellectual or developmental disabilities, research on the use of the technique
with people with brain injury offers several advantages. Firstly, most people with brain
injury were known to be competent communicators prior to the brain injury. Secondly,
many recover sufficiently to allow a retrospective examination of the issues that faced
them when they were using the technique. Thirdly, there can be a large amount of data
available about the person's diagnosis, their prognosis and the course of their history
following the event. Consequently, the current study uses a case study methodology to
explore the application of facilitated communication with people with brain injury and
draws on personal recollections of people with brain injury, interviews with families and
medical and therapist reports.
The three people interviewed in the study displayed varying language and memory abilities.
They indicated a preference for independent communication techniques and they reported
frustrations with using facilitated communication. They quickly rejected the method when
speech began to appear even though their speech was inadequate for communication
purposes, for two of them, for an extended period. One of the interviewees reported that
facilitator influence was overwhelming at times but not always present. Two of the
interviewees felt that facilitated communication gave them a start in their recovery
process. Two of the interviewees reported that meaningful exchanges with others occurred
only with speech.
In addition to these findings the study, although not experimental, was able to shed light
on some of the contentious issues surrounding facilitated communication. The method is
reported to be designed to overcome the motor difficulties of the disabled communicator
by providing physical assistance to individuals with poor fine motor control thus breaking
the perseveration cycle that can be present . However the task of coping with facilitator
influence may actually require some motor skills. Also, the physical effort involved in using
facilitated communication for some individuals may have been underestimated by its
supporters. However the study has shown that some individuals with severe
communication impairments felt that facilitated communication had some merit but saw
their ability to communicate independently as the significant achievement in their recovery.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:ADTP/218723 |
Date | January 1997 |
Creators | Joslyn, Noella, n/a |
Publisher | University of Canberra. Professional & Community Education |
Source Sets | Australiasian Digital Theses Program |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Rights | ), Copyright Noella Joslyn |
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