2,682
Views
55
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Article

Family member involvement in audiology appointments with older people with hearing impairment

, , , &
Pages 70-76 | Received 14 Oct 2013, Accepted 21 Jul 2014, Published online: 21 Aug 2014

References

  • ACSQHC. 2010. Patient-centred care: Improving quality and safety by focusing care on patients and consumers. Canberra: Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care.
  • American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. 2006. Preferred practice patterns for the profession of audiology [Scope of practice]. Available from www.asha.org/policy.
  • Armero O.E. 2001. Effects of denied hearing loss on the significant other. Hear J, 54, 44–47.
  • Avent J., Glista S., Wallace S., Jackson J., Nishioka J. et al. 2005. Family information needs about aphasia. Aphasiology, 19, 365–375.
  • Beisecker A.E. 1989. The influence of a companion on the doctor - elderly patient interaction. Health Commun, 1, 55–70.
  • Beisecker A.E., Brecheisen M.A., Ashworth J. & Hayes J. 1997. Perceptions of the role of cancer patients” companions during medical appointments. J Psychosoc Oncol, 14, 29–45.
  • Beisecker A.E. & Moore W.P. 1994. Oncologists” perceptions of the effects of cancer patients” companions on physician-patient interactions. J Psychosoc Oncol, 12, 23–39.
  • Brooks D.N., Hallam R.S. & Mellor P.A. 2001. The effects on significant others of providing a hearing aid to the hearing-impaired partner. Br J Audiol, 35, 165–171.
  • Brown K., Worrall L., Davidson B. & Howe T. 2012. Living successfully with aphasia: A qualitative meta-analysis of the perspectives of individuals with aphasia, family members, and speech-language pathologists. Int J Speech Lang Pathol, 14, 141–155.
  • Buckwalter K.C., Cusack D., Kruckeberg T. & Shoemaker A. 1991. Family involvement with communication-impaired residents in long-term care settings. Appl Nurs Res, 4, 77–84.
  • Clayman M.L., Roter D., Wissowc, L.S. & Bandeen-Roched K. 2005. Autonomy-related behaviors of patient companions and their effect on decision-making activity in geriatric primary care visits. Soc Sci Med, 60, 1583–1591.
  • Coupland J. & Coupland N. 2001. Roles, responsibilities, and alignments: Multi-party talk in geriatric care. In: M.L. Hummert & J.F. Nussbaum (eds.), Aging, Communication, and Health: Linking Research and Practice for Successful Aging. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Assoc. Inc.
  • Drew P., Chatwin J. & Collins S. 2001. Conversation analysis: A method for research into interactions between patients and health-care professionals. Health Expect, 4, 58–70.
  • Eggly S., Penner L.A., Greene M., Harper F.W.K., Ruckdeschel J.C. et al. 2006. Information seeking during “bad news” oncology interactions: Question asking by patients and their companions. Soc Sci Med, 63, 2974–2985.
  • Ellingson L.L. 2002. The role of companions in geriatric patient-interdisciplinary oncology team interactions. J Aging Stud, 16, 361–382.
  • Epley P., Summers J.A. & Turnbull A. 2010. Characteristics and trends in family-centred conceptualizations. Journal of Family Social Work, 13, 269–285.
  • Family Voices. 2008. Guide to using the family-centered care self-assessment tool. Albuquerque, USA.
  • Gerteis M., Edgman-Levitan S., Daley J. & Delbanco T. 1993. Through the Patient”s Eyes: Understanding and Promoting Patient-Centered Care. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
  • Goffman E. 1981. Forms of Talk, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Haakana M. 2001. Laughter as a patient's resource: Dealing with delicate aspects of medical interaction. Text, 21, 187–219.
  • Haakana M. 2002. Laughter in medical interaction: From quantification to analysis, and back. Journal of Sociolinguistics, 6, 207–235.
  • Hallberg L.R.M. 1999. Hearing impairment, coping, and consequences on family life. J Acad Rehabil Audiol, 32, 45–59.
  • Hallberg L.R.M. & Barrenäs M.-L. 1993. Living with a male with noise-induced hearing loss: Experiences from the perspective of spouses. Br J Audiol, 27, 255–261.
  • Hamilton M.E., Roach M.A. & Riley D.A. 2003. Moving toward family-centred early care and eduation: The past, the present, and a glimpse of the future. Early Childhood Education Journal, 30, 225–232.
  • Heritage J. & Maynard D.W. 2006Communication in Medical Care: Interaction between Primary Care, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Hétu R., Jones L. & Getty L. 1993. The impact of acquired hearing impairment on intimate relationships: Implications for rehabilitation. Audiol Neurootol, 32, 363–381.
  • Hétu R., Riverin L., Lalande N., Getty L. & St-Cyr C. 1988. Qualitative analysis of the handicap associated with occupational hearing loss. Br J Audiol, 22, 251–264.
  • Hickson L. & Worrall L. 2003Communication Disability in Aging: From Prevention to Intervention, Clifton Park, New York: Thomson-Delmar Learning.
  • Humes L.E., Wilson D.L. & Humes A.C. 2003. Examinations of differences between successful and unsuccessful elderly hearing-aid candidates matched for age, hearing loss and gender. Int J Audiol, 42, 432–441.
  • Hutchby I. & Wooffitt R. 2008Conversation Analysis, Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Ishikawa H., Roter D.L., Yamazakia Y. & Takayamac T. 2005. Physician-elderly patient-companion communication and roles of companions in Japanese geriatric encounters. Soc Sci Med, 60, 2307–2320.
  • Jefferson G. 2004Glossary of transcript symbols with an introduction. In: G. Lerner (ed.), Conversation Analysis: Studies from the First Generation. Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 13–23.
  • Jones L., Kyle J. & Wood P. 1987. Words Apart: Losing your Hearing as an Adult, London: Tavistock Publications.
  • Kilmer R.P., Cook J.R. & Munsell E.P. 2010. Moving from principles to practice: Recommended policy changes to promote family-centred care. Am J Community Psychol, 46, 332–341.
  • Manchaiah V.K.C., Stephens D., Zhao F. & Kramer S.E. 2012. The role of communication partners in the audiological enablement/rehabilitation of a person with hearing impairment: an overview. Audiological Medicine, 10, 21–30.
  • Michallet B., Le Dorze G. & Tetreault S. 2001. The needs of spouses caring for severely aphasic persons. Aphasiology, 15, 731–747.
  • Pilnick A., Hindmarsh J. & Gill V.T. 2009. Beyond doctor and patient: Developments in the study of healthcare interactions. Sociol Health Illn, 31, 787–802.
  • Preminger J. & Lind C. 2012. Assisting communication partners in the setting of treatment goals: The development of the Goal-sharing for Partners strategy. Seminars in Hearing, 33, 53–64.
  • Prohaska T.R. & Glasser M. 1996. Patients” views of family involvement in medical care decisions and encounters. Res Aging, 18, 52–69.
  • Purdy M. & Hindenlang J. 2005. Educating and training caregivers of persons with aphasia. Aphasiology, 19, 377–388.
  • Scarinci N., Worrall L. & Hickson L. 2008. The effect of hearing impairment in older people on the spouse. Int J Audiol, 47, 141–151.
  • Scarinci N., Worrall L. & Hickson L. 2009a. The effect of hearing impairment in older people on the spouse: Development and psychometric testing of the significant other scale for hearing disability (SOS-HEAR). Int J Audiol, 48, 671–683.
  • Scarinci N., Worrall L. & Hickson L. 2009b. The ICF and third-party disability: Its application to spouses of older people with hearing impairment. Disabil Rehabil, 31, 2088–2100.
  • Scarinci N., Worrall L. & Hickson L. 2012. Factors associated with third-party disability in spouses of older people with hearing impairment. Ear Hear, 33, 698–708.
  • Schegloff E. 1995. Parties and talking together: Two ways in which numbers are significant for talk-in-interaction. In: P. Ten Have & G. Psathas (eds). Situated Order: Studies in Social Organisation and Embodied Activities. Washington: University Press of America.
  • Schegloff E. 2007. Sequence Organization in Interaction, New York: Cambridge University Press.
  • Schilling L.M., Scatena L., Steiner J.F., Albertson G.A., Lin C.T. et al. 2002. The third person in the room: Frequency, role, and influence of companions during primary care medical encounters. J Fam Pract, 51, 685–690.
  • Shields C., Epstein R., Fiscella K., Franks P., McCann R. et al. 2005. Influence of accompanied encounters on patient-centredness with older patients. The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice, 18, 344–354.
  • Stark P. & Hickson L. 2004. Outcomes of hearing aid fitting for older people with hearing impairment and their significant others. Int J Audiol, 43, 390–398.
  • Street R.L. & Gordon H.S. 2008. Companion participation in cancer consultations. Psychooncology, 17, 244–251.
  • Visser-Meily A., Post M., Gorter J.W., Berlekom S.B.V., Bos T.V.D. et al. 2006. Rehabilitation of stroke patients needs a family-centred approach. Disabil Rehabil, 28, 1557–1561.
  • Wallhagen M.I., Strawbridge W.J., Shema S.J. & Kaplan G.A. 2004. Impact of self-assessed hearing loss on a spouse: A longitudinal analysis of couples. J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci, 59B, S190–S196.
  • Wolff J. & Roter D. 2011. Family presence in routine medical visits: A meta-analytical review. Soc Sci Med, 72, 823–831.
  • World Health Organization. 2001. International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health, ICF. Geneva: World Health Organization.
  • Worrall L., Brown K., Cruice M., Davidson B., Hersh D. et al. 2010. The evidence for a life-coaching approach to aphasia. Aphasiology, 24, 497–514.
  • Zemva N. 1999. Aphasic patients and their families: Wishes and limits. Aphasiology, 13, 219–224.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.