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Communication Activities of Daily LivingSecond Edition CADL2

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Title: Communication Activities of Daily LivingSecond Edition CADL2


1
Communication Activities of Daily Living-Second
Edition (CADL-2)
  • November 10, 2004
  • Lynn Brenman
  • Michele Esses
  • Christine Moawad

2
What is the Communicative Abilities in Daily
Living (CADL)?
  • First test created to assess communicative
    abilities of individuals with aphasia in a
    natural environment.
  • Developed by Audrey Holland at the University of
    Pittsburgh with a grant from the National
    Institutes of Health.
  • First published in 1980.
  • Focused research on the communication strategies
    and pragmatic skills of aphasic patients in their
    natural environments.

3
CADL versus CADL-2
  • CADL title was changed to Communication
    Activities of Daily Living-2nd Edition (CADL-2)
    to reflect World Health Organization current
    terminology.
  • CADL-2 has the same theoretical basis as CADL,
    but is more contemporary and time efficient.

4
Administration
  • It is recommended that the CADL-2 be administered
    by a licensed, certified speech-language
    pathologist who has experience in the field of
    neurogenic communication disorders.
  • CADL-2 has 50 test items.
  • Requires 30 minutes to administer.
  • Available in Japanese and Italian.

5
Intended Population
  • CADL-2 was intended for adults with aphasia.
  • Evidence for success in individuals with
  • Mental Retardation
  • Experience in using Hearing Aids
  • Alzheimers Disease
  • Traumatic Brain Injury
  • Post-Stroke Right-Hemisphere Damage

6
What does CADL-2 measure?
  • Allows the clinician to observe communication
    acts in simulated natural environments.
  • Uses a 3-point scoring system based on the idea
    that transmission of a message exists on a
    continuum from correct to incorrect.
  • Assesses and scores Getting the message across
    as a communication act.

7
Seven Test Categories
  • Reading, Writing, or Using Numbers
  • Contextual reading tasks, estimations, and
    calculations based on numerical ability (e.g.,
    reading signs or directions, making monetary
    change, or setting dates.)
  • Shown an appointment card with the time of the
    patients appointment and a picture of a clock,
    the patient is told, Heres the clock. Its now
    five minutes after ten. How long until your
    appointment?

8
Seven Test Categories
  • Social Interactions- Pragmatic interchanges,
    which require use of speech, gesture, or writing
    to convey information and intent. (e.g.,
    correcting, making inferences, asking for
    repetitions, and overlearned speech acts such as
    greeting and leaving).
  • The examiner greets the patient by saying,
    Hello, Mr./Ms. ______. Examiner waits for
    nonverbal or verbal response.

9
Test Categories Contd
  • Divergent Communication
  • Generation of logical alternatives from
    information provided/readiness to alter direction
    of response. (e.g., choosing from a menu or
    identifying newspaper headline from a photo).
  • Given a choice of four times presented on
    pictures of clock faces, the patient is asked,
    Whats the best time here for eating lunch?
  • Contextual Information
  • Response to direct content presented in a
    context. (e.g., what do you wear on a rainy
    day?, interpreting signs and environmental
    hazards).
  • Shown a picture of a rainy street, the patient
    is asked, What should you wear on a day like
    this?

10
Test Categories Contd
  • Nonverbal Communication
  • Nonverbal communication and symbols,
    movement-related communicative behaviors (e.g.,
    map skills and association between facial
    expression, body language, and emotion.)
  • Patient is asked, Would you hand me that pencil,
    please?
  • Sequential Relationships
  • Ability to perform sequential acts and to
    understand cause-effect relationships (e.g.,
    finding an item in a store by looking at aisle
    signs, understanding the relationship between
    speed on speedometer and speed limit sign, and
    judging what the driver should do.)
  • Shown a building directory, the patient is told,
    Here is a building directory. What floor is Dr.
    Clarks office on?

11
Test Categories Contd
  • Humor/Metaphor/Absurdity
  • Involves high-level linguistic cognitive
    operations (e.g., find the funny picture from a
    choice of three, figurative language Hit the
    roof., identifying absurd recommendations by a
    physician).
  • Patient is asked, If Dr. Clark told you to smoke
    three packs of cigarettes and drink a bottle of
    gin a day, what would you say?

12
Test Items Materials
  • Realistic - commonly found in patients natural
    environments.
  • Color photographs. No b w photos or line
    drawings.
  • Everyday life scenarios.
  • Naturalistic color in drawings.
  • Real items, i.e. telephone and money.
  • Universal environmental signs (e.g., railroad
    crossing, poison).
  • Common reference materials (e.g., maps, Yellow
    Pages).
  • Relevant to most individuals regardless of age,
    gender, socioeconomic status, or cultural or
    ethnic background.

13
Administration Preparation
  • Complete Examiners Record Booklet History
    section.
  • Collect information including diagnosis, level
    of care, education, language background, primary
    communication modality, vision, hearing, and
    premorbid reading/writing skills.
  • Gather required materials Examiner Record
    Booklet, Picture Book, Patient Response Booklet,
    pencil, working telephone, four one-dollar bills
    and four quarters .

14
Test Administration
  • Create a positive, relaxed, friendly, and
    accepting atmosphere.
  • Encourage patients to communicate using any means
    that they have.
  • Present items at normal rate of speech.
  • No penalty for repetition of a question.
  • Assess verbal and non-verbal communicative
    behaviors.
  • Record content and modality of responses.

15
Scoring the CADL-2
  • Three-point scoring system. Getting the message
    across is being scored.
  • 0 Wrong response (e.g., silence, stereotypic
    response, echoing test item, jargon use).
  • 1 Adequate response (e.g., partially correct
    response or correct response after repetition of
    the question).
  • 2 Unequivocally correct response.

16
Results
  • Results reported in three ways
  • Raw Score (0-100 points)
  • Percentile - Percentage of scores in a normative
    sample that occur below a given raw score.
  • Stanine - Expresses score as distance from mean
    using standard deviation. Results are divided
    into 9 levels of functional communication (high
    to low).

17
Score Results
18
Caveats to Interpreting Results
  • CADL-2 does not claim to address full scope of
    conversation.
  • Not intended for use in long-term care settings.
  • Results taken alone do not diagnose anything.

19
Standardization
  • Sample included 175 adults with neurogenic
    communication disorders (primarily left or right
    hemisphere stroke or TBI).
  • Sample approximated 1997 U.S. Bureau of Census
    statistics for race, ethnicity, gender,
    residence, and geographic region.

20
Standardization Contd
  • Sample did not consider socio-economic
    characteristics.
  • Northeast over-represented by 20.
  • South under-represented by 16.

21
Test Reliability
  • Degree to which test score differences can be
    tied to characteristics being examined versus
    chance.
  • Content Sampling (homogeneity) .93
    Chronbach coefficient alpha
  • Time Sampling (test-retest consistency) .85
    coefficient
  • Interscorer Difference
    .99 coefficient

22
Test Validity
  • Does test measure what it claims to measure?
  • Content
  • Examined by 10 certified licensed SLPs
  • Item validity coefficient .2
    (.2 - .3 is considered
    acceptable)
  • Criteria (r.66, plt.01 Pearson correlation)
  • Construct Validity
  • Group differentiation (t-ratio 19.5)
  • Item Validity (median .47, .2 is acceptable)
  • Correlation to Other Assessment Measures
    (Spearman r-.05, plt.01, n127)

23
Peer Review
  • Worrall, McCooey et al. (2002) cite CADL-2 as an
    example of an assessment specifically designed
    for community-based Americans with aphasia.
  • Ross and Wertz (2004) state that CADL-2 is
    accurate in confirming mild aphasia. Results
    suggest it may be administered and interpreted
    reliably.

24
Theory/Rationale
  • First test designed to measure the communicative
    abilities of individuals with aphasia
    particularly through natural contexts. Prior to
    CADL in 1980 there was no research in this area.
  • Developed from a sociolinguistic theory and a
    holistic framework of functional communication,
    which focuses on assessment in a natural,
    contextualized manner.

25
Theory/Rationale Contd
  • Sociolinguistics is the study of the relationship
    between language and society.
  • According to Holmes (1992), the following are
    components of social communication
  • The participants who is speaking and to whom are
    they speaking?
  • The setting or social context where are they
    speaking?
  • The topic what is being talked about?
  • The function why are the speaking/listening
  • This framework provides better understanding of
    everyday communication of people with aphasia.

26
Theory/Rationale Contd
  • CADL was created based on the following
    questions
  • How do normal speakers demonstrate comprehension
    of communicative acts?
  • What functional communication activities do most
    normal speakers engage in?
  • What do normal readers read?
  • What do normal writers write?
  • How do normal speakers use numbers for
    communicative purposes?
  • How do people communicate that they cannot or do
    not wish to communicate?
  • What are some elementary adaptive strategies for
    clarifying miscommunications?
  • CADL and CADL-2 have the same underlying
    principles.

27
Theory/Rationale Contd
  • The CADL-2 tries to capture the multidimensional
    nature of everyday communication by
  • recreating microcosmic interactions of basic
    activities that individuals carry out in daily
    life, that the clinician can directly and
    practically observe.
  • objectification of observations using valid and
    reliable methods.
  • using a 3 point scoring system (correct,
    adequate, incorrect), emphasizing that getting a
    message across occurs on a continuum from right
    to wrong.
  • These contribute to the better understanding of
    communication in adults with language and
    cognitive disorders.

28
Theory/Rationale Contd
  • Information gathered by recreating the
    environment allows for enhanced
  • Assessment and predictability of how the patient
    will communicate in the natural setting.
  • selection of therapy targets in intervention
    including communication strategies and pragmatic
    skills.
  • Decision making.

29
Issues Raised
  • Functional communication issues include
  • Should functional communication measures contain
    everyday examples or lists of items that are
    important to the individual client/SLP?
  • Are the CADL-2 activities applicable to everyone
    and all situations?
  • Does everyday communication vary between
    individuals, disorders, cultures and
    environments?
  • Do the test items represent the real everyday
    communication of real clients?

30
Opinion
  • Recreates naturalistic environment and functional
    challenges.
  • Assesses in multiple modalities (verbal,
    non-verbal, written and oral)
  • Statistically sound.
  • Not suited for long-term care settings.
  • Doesnt capture subtle speaker and listener
    adjustments.

31
Opinion Contd
  • While the CADL-2 is not suited for use in
    long-term care settings, does not capture subtle
    speaker-listener adjustments, and is not a
    medical diagnostic tool, it is a valuable
    instrument for making decisions regarding
    treatment and rehabilitation.

32
References
  • Holland, A. L. (1980). Communication activities
    of daily living. Baltimore, MD University Park
    Press.
  • Holmes, J. (1992). An introduction to
    sociolinguistics. London Longman.
  • Ross, K. B. and Wertz, R. T. (2004). Accuracy of
    formal tests for diagnosing mild aphasia An
    application of evidence-based medicine,
    Aphasiology, 18 (4), 337-355.
  • Worrall, L., McCooey, R. et al. (2002). The
    validity of functional assessments of
    communication and the Activity/Participation
    components of the ICIDH-2 do they reflect what
    really happens in real-life?, Journal of
    Communication Disorders, 35, 107-137.
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