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Research Article

Living with aphasia: Three Indigenous Australian stories

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Pages 271-280 | Published online: 04 Apr 2012

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (19)

Frances Cochrane, Jenna Singleton-Bray, Waverley Canendo, Petrea Cornwell & Samantha Siyambalapitiya. (2023) “Working together… I can't stress how important it is”: Indigenous Health Liaison Officers’ insights into working with speech-language pathologists and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples with stroke and TBI. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 0:0, pages 1-13.
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Megan Eustace, Katrina McGarr & Catherine Theys. (2023) Māori aspirations following stroke: A pathway forward for the speech-language therapy field. Aphasiology 0:0, pages 1-24.
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Elizabeth Armstrong, Juli Coffin, Deborah Hersh, Judith M. Katzenellenbogen, Sandra C. Thompson, Natalie Ciccone, Leon Flicker, Deborah Woods, Colleen Hayward, Catelyn Dowell & Meaghan McAllister. (2021) “You felt like a prisoner in your own self, trapped”: the experiences of Aboriginal people with acquired communication disorders. Disability and Rehabilitation 43:13, pages 1903-1916.
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Frances Cochrane, Samantha Siyambalapitiya & Petrea Cornwell. (2020) Speech-language pathology services for Indigenous Australian adults with acquired communication disorders: a systematic quantitative literature review. Speech, Language and Hearing 23:2, pages 79-90.
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Natalie Ciccone, Elizabeth Armstrong, Deborah Hersh, Mick Adams & Meaghan MCAllister. (2019) The Wangi (talking) project: A feasibility study of a rehabilitation model for aboriginal people with acquired communication disorders after stroke. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 21:3, pages 305-316.
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Deborah Hersh. (2018) From individual to global: Human rights and aphasia. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 20:1, pages 39-43.
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Elizabeth M Armstrong, Natalie Ciccone, Deborah Hersh, Judith Katzenellebogen, Juli Coffin, Sandra Thompson, Leon Flicker, Colleen Hayward, Deborah Woods & Meaghan McAllister. (2017) Development of the Aboriginal Communication Assessment After Brain Injury (ACAABI): A screening tool for identifying acquired communication disorders in Aboriginal Australians. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 19:3, pages 297-308.
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Claire Penn & Elizabeth Armstrong. (2017) Intercultural aphasia: new models of understanding for Indigenous populations. Aphasiology 31:5, pages 563-594.
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Frances Clare Cochrane, Louise Brown, Samantha Siyambalapitiya & Christopher Plant. (2016) “… Trial and error …”: Speech-language pathologists’ perspectives of working with Indigenous Australian adults with acquired communication disorders. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 18:5, pages 420-431.
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Elizabeth Armstrong, Deborah Hersh, Colleen Hayward & Joan Fraser. (2015) Communication disorders after stroke in Aboriginal Australians. Disability and Rehabilitation 37:16, pages 1462-1469.
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Sara Jodache, Tami Howe & Samantha Siyambalapitiya. (2015) Assessment of a Samoan–English speaker with bilingual aphasia: “it’s hard”. Aphasiology 29:7, pages 872-888.
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Deborah Hersh, Elizabeth Armstrong, Vanessa Panak & Jacqui Coombes. (2015) Speech-language pathology practices with Indigenous Australians with acquired communication disorders. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 17:1, pages 74-85.
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Deborah Hersh, Elizabeth Armstrong & Noni Bourke. (2015) A narrative analysis of a speech pathologist’s work with Indigenous Australians with acquired communication disorders. Disability and Rehabilitation 37:1, pages 33-40.
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Karen M. McLellan, Clare M. McCann, Linda E. Worrall & Matire L. N. Harwood. (2014) Māori experiences of aphasia therapy: “But I'm from Hauiti and we've got shags”. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 16:5, pages 529-540.
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Karen M. McLellan, Clare M. McCann, Linda E. Worrall & Matire L. N. Harwood. (2014) “For Māori, language is precious. And without it we are a bit lost”: Māori experiences of aphasia. Aphasiology 28:4, pages 453-470.
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Bronwyn Davidson, Anne E. Hill & Alison Nelson. (2013) Responding to the World Report on Disability in Australia: Lessons from collaboration in an urban Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander school. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 15:1, pages 69-74.
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Jane McCormack & Anna O'Callaghan. (2012) Diversity and development: Selected papers from the Speech Pathology Australia National Conference (2011). International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 14:3, pages 187-188.
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Articles from other publishers (7)

India Bohanna, Michelle Fitts, Katrina Bird, Jennifer Fleming, John Gilroy, Alan Clough, Adrian Esterman, Paul Maruff & Martin Potter. (2019) The Potential of a Narrative and Creative Arts Approach to Enhance Transition Outcomes for Indigenous Australians Following Traumatic Brain Injury. Brain Impairment 20:2, pages 160-170.
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Molly Manning, Anne MacFarlane, Anne Hickey & Sue Franklin. (2019) Perspectives of people with aphasia post-stroke towards personal recovery and living successfully: A systematic review and thematic synthesis. PLOS ONE 14:3, pages e0214200.
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Felicity A. S. Bright, Nicola M. Kayes, Kathryn M. McPherson & Linda E. Worrall. (2018) Engaging people experiencing communication disability in stroke rehabilitation: a qualitative study. International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders 53:5, pages 981-994.
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Susan Gauld, Sharon Smith & Melissa Bianca Kendall. (2018) Exploring the impact of sharing personal narratives of brain injury through film in Australian Indigenous communities. Edorium Journal of Disability and Rehabilitation 4:1, pages 1-9.
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Elizabeth Armstrong, Deborah Hersh, Judith M. Katzenellenbogen, Juli Coffin, Sandra C. Thompson, Natalie Ciccone, Colleen Hayward, Leon Flicker, Deborah Woods & Meaghan McAllister. (2015) Study Protocol: Missing Voices – Communication Difficulties after Stroke and Traumatic Brain Injury in Aboriginal Australians . Brain Impairment 16:2, pages 145-156.
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Judith M. Katzenellenbogen, Matthew W. Knuiman, Frank M. Sanfilippo, Michael S. T. Hobbs & Sandra C. Thompson. (2014) Prevalence of Stroke and Coexistent Conditions: Disparities between Indigenous and Nonindigenous Western Australians. International Journal of Stroke 9:SA100, pages 61-68.
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Karen M. Brewer, Matire L. N. Harwood, Clare M. McCann, Sue M. Crengle & Linda E. Worrall. (2014) The Use of Interpretive Description Within Kaupapa Māori Research. Qualitative Health Research 24:9, pages 1287-1297.
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