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Review

The experience of close personal relationships from the perspective of people with aphasia: thematic analysis of the literature

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Pages 367-393 | Received 04 Jul 2017, Accepted 01 Dec 2017, Published online: 14 Dec 2017

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Read on this site (8)

Natalie F. Douglas, Brent Archer, Jamie H. Azios, Katie A. Strong, Nina Simmons-Mackie & Linda Worrall. (2023) A scoping review of friendship intervention for older adults: lessons for designing intervention for people with aphasia. Disability and Rehabilitation 45:18, pages 3012-3031.
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Katie Monnelly, Jane Marshall & Madeline Cruice. (2022) Intensive Comprehensive Aphasia Programmes: a systematic scoping review and analysis using the TIDieR checklist for reporting interventions. Disability and Rehabilitation 44:21, pages 6471-6496.
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Karen Carcello & Susan McLennon. (2022) “Personal road map for recovery:” examining the therapeutic use of weblogs by stroke survivors with aphasia. Disability and Rehabilitation 44:10, pages 1933-1938.
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Jamie H. Azios, Katie A. Strong, Brent Archer, Natalie F. Douglas, Nina Simmons-Mackie & Linda Worrall. (2022) Friendship matters: a research agenda for aphasia. Aphasiology 36:3, pages 317-336.
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Articles from other publishers (13)

Shauna Bell, Andrea Horgan & Helen Kelly. (2024) “You’ll find most people who got involved with the Café couldn’t do without it now” – Socialising in an online versus in-person Aphasia Café. Advances in Communication and Swallowing, pages 1-15.
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Brent Archer, Jamie H. Azios, Natalie F. Douglas, Katie A. Strong, Linda Worrall & Nina Simmons-Mackie. (2024) “I Could Not Talk . . . She Did Everything . . . She's Now My Sister”: People With Aphasia's Perspectives on Friends Who Stuck Around. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 33:1, pages 349-368.
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Katie A. Strong. (2023) Supporting Mental Health in People Living With Aphasia: A Call to Action. Perspectives of the ASHA Special Interest Groups 8:6, pages 1321-1334.
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Janne M. Veerbeek, Clemens Hutter, Beatrice Ottiger, Soel Micheletti, Simone Riedi, Enrico Bianchi, Noortje Maaijwee, Tim Vanbellingen & Thomas Nyffeler. (2023) Profiling Daily Life Performance Recovery in the Early Subacute Phase After Stroke Using a Graphical Modeling Approach. Journal of the American Heart Association 12:16.
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Elizabeth B. Madden, Lauren Bislick, Sarah E. Wallace, Michelle C.S. Therrien & Rachel Goff-Albritton. (2023) Aphasia and friendship: Stroke survivors’ self-reported changes over time. Journal of Communication Disorders 103, pages 106330.
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Katie A. Strong, Natalie F. Douglas, Rebecca Johnson, Maura Silverman, Jamie H. Azios & Brent Archer. (2023) Stakeholder-Engaged Research. Topics in Language Disorders 43:1, pages 43-56.
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Amy Ford, Jacinta Douglas & Robyn O’Halloran. (2021) The experience of close personal relationships after stroke: scoping review and thematic analysis of qualitative literature. Brain Impairment 23:3, pages 231-261.
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Bonnie B. Y. Cheng, Brooke J. Ryan, David A. Copland & Sarah J. Wallace. (2022) Prognostication in Poststroke Aphasia: Perspectives of Significant Others of People With Aphasia on Receiving Information About Recovery. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 31:2, pages 896-911.
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Mackenzie E. Fama, Erin Lemonds & Galya Levinson. (2022) The Subjective Experience of Word-Finding Difficulties in People With Aphasia: A Thematic Analysis of Interview Data. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 31:1, pages 3-11.
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Michelle C. S. Therrien, Elizabeth B. Madden, Lauren Bislick & Sarah E. Wallace. (2021) Aphasia and Friendship: The Role and Perspectives of Speech-Language Pathologists. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 30:5, pages 2228-2240.
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Mackenzie E. Fama, Brooke Hatfield, Suzanne Coyle, Melissa S. Richman & Amy C. Georgeadis. (2021) The Impact of the COVID-19 Public Health Crisis on Communication and Quality of Life: Insights From a Community of Stroke and Brain Trauma Survivors. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 30:4, pages 1805-1818.
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Jacinta M. Douglas. (2018) The Things that Help, the Things that Get in the Way : Working Together to Improve Outcome Following Acquired Brain Injury . Brain Impairment 19:3, pages 258-269.
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Margaret Pozzebon, Jacinta Douglas & David Ames. (2018) Facing the Challenges of Primary Progressive Aphasia: The Spousal Perspective. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research 61:9, pages 2292-2312.
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