NIDCD - National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders
Aphasia is a language disorder caused by acquired brain injury that affects one third of stroke survivors and more than 2 million people in the United States. Improving mental health is identified as the #1 stroke recovery priority. Stroke survivors with aphasia (SSwA) experience disproportionately poor mental health compared to stroke survivors without aphasia, with high rates of depression, anxiety, and general psychological distress. Poor mental health affects aphasia recovery, and poor aphasia recovery affects mental health. Therefore, mental health services need to be offered as part of comprehensive aphasia rehabilitation to maximize recovery. Adjustment counseling is within the scope of practice for speech-language pathologists (SLPs), who are well-positioned to address the bi-directional relationship between mental health and aphasia as primary providers of interdisciplinary psychological care. Our team has developed Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) for Aphasia, an integrated aphasia- adapted counseling and communication strategy intervention provided by SLPs. ACT improves psychological flexibility, allowing people to lead lives consistent with their deeply held values, even in the face of persistent psychological distress. ACT pairs well with communication skills training because they help SSwA understand and express themselves during counseling. In turn, ACT helps SSwA become more willing to participate in meaningful life activities and apply communication skills in challenging situations, supporting skill generalization. Our completed Phase I pilot found good intervention acceptability, feasibility, and promising preliminary outcomes, with large effect sizes for reducing psychological distress. This proposal will evaluate the effectiveness of ACT for Aphasia for improving mental health and functional communication in stroke survivors with aphasia. Aim 1 will evaluate ACT for Aphasia via a well-powered Phase II Randomized Controlled Trial. Aim 2 will engage clinician and community end users and healthcare system experts in exploratory implementation research to inform future implementation and intervention refinement. We predict that a) ACT for Aphasia will significantly reduce psychological distress (the primary outcome) and improve functional communication (an exploratory secondary outcome), compared to an active control condition consisting of usual care intervention components, and b) will meet defined benchmarks to justify a large-scale Phase III efficacy trial. Study success will support continued development and evaluation of this novel intervention and determine optimal implementation pathways for improving access to interdisciplinary psychological aphasia care in the United States.
Up to $664K
2031-02-28
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