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Research Article

Living successfully with aphasia: A qualitative meta-analysis of the perspectives of individuals with aphasia, family members, and speech-language pathologists

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Pages 141-155 | Published online: 12 Dec 2011

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Leana Nichol, Rachelle Pitt, Sarah J. Wallace, Amy D. Rodriguez & Annie J. Hill. (2023) “There are endless areas that they can use it for”: speech-language pathologist perspectives of technology support for aphasia self-management. Disability and Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology 18:8, pages 1473-1488.
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Sue Sherratt. (2023) People with aphasia living alone: A scoping review. Aphasiology 0:0, pages 1-26.
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Bonnie B. Y. Cheng, Brooke J. Ryan, David A. Copland & Sarah J. Wallace. (2023) Prognostication in post-stroke aphasia: Perspectives of people with aphasia on receiving information about recovery. Neuropsychological Rehabilitation 33:5, pages 871-902.
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Felicity A. S. Bright, Claire Ibell-Roberts & Bobbie-Jo Wilson. (2023) Psychosocial well-being after stroke in Aotearoa New Zealand: a qualitative metasynthesis. Disability and Rehabilitation 0:0, pages 1-14.
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Leana Nichol, Amy D. Rodriguez, Rachelle Pitt, Sarah J. Wallace & Annie J. Hill. (2023) “Self-management has to be the way of the future”: Exploring the perspectives of speech-language pathologists who work with people with aphasia. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 25:2, pages 327-341.
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Natsumi Iwasaki, Brooke Ryan, Linda Worrall, Miranda Rose & Caroline Baker. (2023) Experiences of mood changes and preferences for management within stepped psychological care from the perspective of spouses of people with aphasia. Aphasiology 37:2, pages 330-361.
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Leana Nichol, Sarah J. Wallace, Rachelle Pitt, Amy D. Rodriguez, Zhi Zhi Diong & Annie J. Hill. (2022) People with aphasia share their views on self-management and the role of technology to support self-management of aphasia. Disability and Rehabilitation 44:24, pages 7399-7412.
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Leana Nichol, Sarah J. Wallace, Rachelle Pitt, Amy D. Rodriguez & Annie J. Hill. (2022) Communication partner perspectives of aphasia self-management and the role of technology: an in-depth qualitative exploration. Disability and Rehabilitation 44:23, pages 7199-7216.
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Bonnie B. Y. Cheng, Brooke Ryan, David A. Copland & Sarah J. Wallace. (2022) Prognostication in post-stroke aphasia: speech pathologists’ clinical insights on formulating and delivering information about recovery. Disability and Rehabilitation 44:18, pages 5046-5059.
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Molly Manning, Anne MacFarlane, Anne Hickey, Rose Galvin & Sue Franklin. (2022) The relevance of stroke care for living well with post-stroke aphasia: a qualitative interview study with working-aged adults. Disability and Rehabilitation 44:14, pages 3440-3452.
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Amanda Elston, Rebecca Barnden, Deborah Hersh, Erin Godecke, Dominique A. Cadilhac, Natasha A. Lannin, Ian Kneebone & Nadine E. Andrew. (2022) Developing person-centred goal setting resources with and for people with aphasia: a multi-phase qualitative study. Aphasiology 36:7, pages 761-780.
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Megan E. Schliep, Victoria Tilton-Bolowsky & Sofia Vallila-Rohter. (2022) Cue responsiveness as a measure of emerging language ability in aphasia. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 29:2, pages 133-145.
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Sweta Panda, Anne Whitworth, Deborah Hersh & Britta Biedermann. (2021) “Giving yourself some breathing room…”: an exploration of group meditation for people with aphasia. Aphasiology 35:12, pages 1544-1572.
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Katharyn Mumby & Hazel Roddam. (2021) Aphasia and Spirituality: the feasibility of assessment and intervention using WELLHEAD and SHALOM. Aphasiology 35:7, pages 925-949.
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Sue Sherratt & Linda Worrall. (2021) Posttraumatic growth following aphasia: a prospective cohort study of the first year post-stroke. Aphasiology 35:3, pages 291-313.
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Michelle C. Attard, Yasmine Loupis, Leanne Togher & Miranda L. Rose. (2020) Experiences of people with severe aphasia and spouses attending an Interdisciplinary Community Aphasia Group. Disability and Rehabilitation 42:10, pages 1382-1396.
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Caroline Baker, Linda Worrall, Miranda Rose & Brooke Ryan. (2020) ‘It was really dark’: the experiences and preferences of people with aphasia to manage mood changes and depression. Aphasiology 34:1, pages 19-46.
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Ciara Shiggins, Varda Soskolne, Dafna Olenik, Gill Pearl, Line Haaland-Johansen, Jytte Isaksen, Caroline Jagoe, Ruth McMenamin & Simon Horton. (2020) Towards an asset-based approach to promoting and sustaining well-being for people with aphasia and their families: an international exploratory study. Aphasiology 34:1, pages 70-101.
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Linda Worrall. (2019) The seven habits of highly effective aphasia therapists: The perspective of people living with aphasia. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 21:5, pages 438-447.
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Ashleigh Beales, Kristyn Bates, Jade Cartwright & Anne Whitworth. (2019) Lost for words: Perspectives and experiences of people with primary progressive aphasia and Alzheimer’s disease and their families of participation in a lexical retrieval intervention. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 21:5, pages 483-492.
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Rachelle Pitt, Deborah Theodoros, Anne J. Hill & Trevor Russell. (2019) The impact of the telerehabilitation group aphasia intervention and networking programme on communication, participation, and quality of life in people with aphasia. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 21:5, pages 513-523.
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Monique R. Pappadis, Shilpa Krishnan, Catherine C. Hay, Beata Jones, Angelle M. Sander, Susan C. Weller & Timothy A. Reistetter. (2019) Lived experiences of chronic cognitive and mood symptoms among community-dwelling adults following stroke: a mixed-methods analysis. Aging & Mental Health 23:9, pages 1227-1233.
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Carole Anglade, Guylaine Le Dorze & Claire Croteau. (2019) Service encounter interactions of people living with moderate-to-severe post-stroke aphasia in their community. Aphasiology 33:9, pages 1061-1082.
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Sarah J. Wallace, Caroline Baker, Caitlin Brandenburg, Lucy Bryant, Guylaine Le Dorze, Emma Power, Madeleine Pritchard, Miranda L. Rose, Tanya Rose, Brooke Ryan, Kirstine Shrubsole, Nina Simmons-Mackie, Leanne Togher & Megan Trebilcock. (2019) A how-to guide to aphasia services: celebrating Professor Linda Worrall’s contribution to the field. Aphasiology 33:7, pages 888-902.
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Christine Alary Gauvreau, Guylaine Le Dorze, Claire Croteau & Marie-Christine Hallé. (2019) Understanding practices of speech-language pathologists in aphasia rehabilitation: a grounded theory study. Aphasiology 33:7, pages 846-864.
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Katarina L. Haley, Jennifer L. Womack, Tyson G. Harmon, Karen L. McCulloch & Richard A. Faldowski. (2019) Life activity choices by people with aphasia: repeated interviews and proxy agreement. Aphasiology 33:6, pages 710-730.
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Jemma Skeat & Hazel Roddam. (2019) The qual-CAT: Applying a rapid review approach to qualitative research to support clinical decision-making in speech-language pathology practice. Evidence-Based Communication Assessment and Intervention 13:1-2, pages 3-14.
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Julie M. H. Plourde, Suzanne C. Purdy, Celia Moore, Philippa Friary, Roger Brown & Clare M. McCann. (2019) Gavel Club for people with aphasia: communication confidence and quality of communication life. Aphasiology 33:1, pages 73-93.
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Caitlin Pike, Alta Kritzinger & Bhavani Pillay. (2017) Social participation in working-age adults with aphasia: an updated systematic review. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 24:8, pages 627-639.
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Caitlin Brandenburg, Linda Worrall, David Copland & Amy Rodriguez. (2017) An exploratory investigation of the daily talk time of people with non-fluent aphasia and non-aphasic peers. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 19:4, pages 418-429.
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Sarah J. Wallace, Linda Worrall, Tanya Rose, Guylaine Le Dorze, Madeline Cruice, Jytte Isaksen, Anthony Pak Hin Kong, Nina Simmons-Mackie, Nerina Scarinci & Christine Alary Gauvreau. (2017) Which outcomes are most important to people with aphasia and their families? an international nominal group technique study framed within the ICF. Disability and Rehabilitation 39:14, pages 1364-1379.
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Lauren K. Pettit, Kerstin M. Tönsing & Shakila Dada. (2017) The perspectives of adults with aphasia and their team members regarding the importance of nine life areas for rehabilitation: a pilot investigation. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 24:2, pages 99-106.
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Esther S. Kim, Andrea Ruelling, J. Renzo Garcia & Rhonda Kajner. (2017) A pilot study examining the impact of aphasia camp participation on quality of life for people with aphasia. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 24:2, pages 107-113.
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Yiting Emily Guo, Leanne Togher, Emma Power & Gerald C. H. Koh. (2016) Validation of the Stroke and Aphasia Quality of Life Scale in a multicultural population. Disability and Rehabilitation 38:26, pages 2584-2592.
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Marie-Philippe Laliberté, Christine Alary Gauvreau & Guylaine Le Dorze. (2016) A pilot study on how speech-language pathologists include social participation in aphasia rehabilitation. Aphasiology 30:10, pages 1117-1133.
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Helen Kelly, Fiona Kennedy, Hannah Britton, Graham McGuire & James Law. (2016) Narrowing the “digital divide”—facilitating access to computer technology to enhance the lives of those with aphasia: a feasibility study. Aphasiology 30:2-3, pages 133-163.
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Laura Cubirka, Scott Barnes & Alison Ferguson. (2015) Student speech pathologists’ experiences of an aphasia therapy group. Aphasiology 29:12, pages 1497-1515.
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Kelly Knollman-Porter, Sarah E. Wallace, Karen Hux, Jessica Brown & Candace Long. (2015) Reading experiences and use of supports by people with chronic aphasia. Aphasiology 29:12, pages 1448-1472.
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Katarina L. Haley, Jennifer L. Womack, Tyson G. Harmon & Sharon W. Williams. (2015) Visual analog rating of mood by people with aphasia. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 22:4, pages 239-245.
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Irma Pinxsterhuis, Elin B. Strand & Unni Sveen. (2015) Coping with chronic fatigue syndrome: a review and synthesis of qualitative studies. Fatigue: Biomedicine, Health & Behavior 3:3, pages 173-188.
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Jasvinder K. Sekhon, Jacinta Douglas & Miranda L. Rose. (2015) Current Australian speech-language pathology practice in addressing psychological well-being in people with aphasia after stroke. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 17:3, pages 252-262.
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Katie Ekberg, Carly Meyer, Nerina Scarinci, Caitlin Grenness & Louise Hickson. (2015) Family member involvement in audiology appointments with older people with hearing impairment. International Journal of Audiology 54:2, pages 70-76.
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Brooke Grohn, Linda Worrall, Nina Simmons-Mackie & Kyla Hudson. (2014) Living successfully with aphasia during the first year post-stroke: A longitudinal qualitative study. Aphasiology 28:12, pages 1405-1425.
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Maria Assunção C. Matos, Luis M. T. Jesus & Madeline Cruice. (2014) Consequences of stroke and aphasia according to the ICF domains: Views of Portuguese people with aphasia, family members and professionals. Aphasiology 28:7, pages 771-796.
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Sabine Corsten, Jürgen Konradi, Erika J. Schimpf, Friedericke Hardering & Annerose Keilmann. (2014) Improving quality of life in aphasia—Evidence for the effectiveness of the biographic-narrative approach. Aphasiology 28:4, pages 440-452.
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Amy D. Rodriguez, Linda Worrall, Kyla Brown, Brooke Grohn, Eril McKinnon, Charlene Pearson, Sophia Van Hees, Tracy Roxbury, Petrea Cornwell, Anna MacDonald, Anthony Angwin, Elizabeth Cardell, Bronwyn Davidson & David A. Copland. (2013) Aphasia LIFT: Exploratory investigation of an intensive comprehensive aphasia programme. Aphasiology 27:11, pages 1339-1361.
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Edna M. Babbitt, Linda E. Worrall & Leora R. Cherney. (2013) Clinician Perspectives of an Intensive Comprehensive Aphasia Program. Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation 20:5, pages 398-408.
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Kyla Brown, Bronwyn Davidson, Linda E. Worrall & Tami Howe. (2013) “Making a good time”: The role of friendship in living successfully with aphasia. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 15:2, pages 165-175.
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Isla Jones, Julie Marshall, Rebecca Lawthom & Jennifer Read. (2013) Involving people with communication disability in research in Uganda: A response to the World Report on Disability. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 15:1, pages 75-78.
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Brooke Grohn, Linda E. Worrall, Nina Simmons-Mackie & Kyla Brown. (2012) The first 3-months post-stroke: What facilitates successfully living with aphasia?. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology 14:4, pages 390-400.
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