Title: Diagnosing Childhood Stuttering: Results from 100 Clinical Evaluations
1Diagnosing Childhood Stuttering Results from100
Clinical Evaluations
- J. Scott Yaruss, PhD, CCC-SLP
- Speech Fluency LaboratoryUniversity of
Pittsburgh
2Purpose
- To present results from the diagnostic
evaluations of 100 children who stutter - To evaluate trends in the data that might shed
light on the underlying nature of childhood
stuttering - To present clinical benchmarks that canbe used
to help clinicians evaluate their treatment
recommendation decisions
3Background
- Considerable research on childhood stuttering has
been conducted in recent years regarding - The developmental course of stuttering
- The frequency and types of disfluencies exhibited
by children who stutter - The speech and language abilities of children who
stutter
4Background (cont.)
- Still, the diagnosis of young children who
stutter remains less than an exact science (to
put it mildly) - Stuttering is a multifaceted disorder that
manifests itself in different ways - Clinicians are not clear which variables (from a
host of possible options) should be targeted in a
diagnostic evaluation
5Many Variables
- When diagnosing children at risk for stuttering,
clinicians must considermany variables,
including - Observable characteristics of stuttering
- Psychosocial factors
- Psycholinguistic factors
- Physiological factors
- Other Variables (?)
6Some Problems
- Many of the variables may not be directly related
to speech fluency - Phonological development
- Lexical access / Word-finding
- Speech/language development
- Variables interact and manifest themselves
differently in different children who stutter
7Another ProblemRecommending Treatment
- Not all children need to be referredfor formal
treatment - Many children outgrow their disfluencies, so it
is not necessary to treat everyone - There are not sufficient resources to treat all
disfluent children - PROBLEM It is not always clear who does need
treatment and who does not
8 Some Important Questions
- Which variables should be considered?
- How do children who stutter performon commonly
administered tests of stuttering and other
aspects of speech/language development? - What are the characteristics of thosechildren
referred for treatment?
9Developing Solutions
- It would be helpful for clinicians to have access
to a database of diagnostic information to guide
decision-making - Data collected in a consistent fashion
- Using a standard battery of commonly used tests
and measures - Based on clinical data similar to what is
collected in the real world
10The 100 Kids Project
- Conture, EG, Yaruss, JS, LaSalle, LR (1990,
Nov.). One-hundred young stutterers Making sense
of their clinical records. Miniseminar presented
at the Annual ASHA Convention, Seattle, WA. - Yaruss, JS, LaSalle, LR, Conture, EG (1995,
Nov.). One-hundred children who stutter
Revisiting their clinical records. Seminar
presented at the Annual ASHA Convention, Orlando,
FL. - Yaruss, JS, LaSalle, LR, Conture, EG
(submitted). Evaluating stuttering in young
children Diagnostic data. Manuscript submitted
for publication. for
publication.
11General Purpose
- To describe the speech and language behaviors of
100 children, age two to six, referred for
evaluation of their fluency - To examine relationships between fluency and
other aspects of development - To examine differences in testing resultsfor
children recommended for - - treatment
- - re-evaluation
- -neither treatment nor re-evaluation
12Method
- Subjects
- 85 boys, 15 girls
- Mean age54.7 mos. (SD12.2 mos.)
- Referred to university clinic for initial
diagnostic evaluation of speech fluency based on
parents concern re stuttering - Analyses based on retrospective analysis of
detailed diagnostic reports
13Diagnostic Procedures
- Based on a standard battery of tests (Conture,
1990 Conture Caruso, 1987 Conture Yaruss,
1993). - 3-hour evaluation, including
- Detailed Parent Interview
- Informal Observation of Childs Speech
- Direct Speech-Language Testing
14 Measures of Fluency I
- Commonly assessed observable characteristics of
stuttering - Average Frequency of Disfluency
- Average Duration of Disfluency
- Most common Types of Disfluency
- Within-word disfluencies
- Between-word disfluencies
- Sound Prolongation Index
15Measures ofFluency II
- Commonly used tests of stuttering
- Stuttering Severity Instrument (Riley, 1980)
- Iowa Scale for Rating the Severityof Stuttering
(Johnson et al., 1963) - Stuttering Prediction Instrument (Riley, 1981)
- Stocker Probe Technique (Stocker, 1980)
16Measures of Speech and Language Development
- Phonological Development
- Picture naming task (GFTA, Weiss, Hodson)
- Phonological processes analysis (Edwards)
- Receptive Vocabulary (PPVT)
- Expressive Language
- -- MLU, Grammatical Morphemes
- -- Standardized Test
(TELD,PLS-3,CELF) - -- Informal play-based
assessment
17Other Measures
- Childs Diadochokinetic Rates
- Based on rapid repeated production
ofpuh-tuh-kuh following a model and compared
to available norms - Parents Articulatory Speaking Rates
- Since parents are often told to change their
speaking rates during treatment
18Diagnostic Decisions
- Treatment Treatment in a parent/ child fluency
group involving weekly group and individual
sessions - Re-evaluation Re-evaluation 3 to 6 months
following initial evaluation - No treatment Neither treatment nor
re-evaluation at time of evaluation - Parents received extensive counseling
19Selected Results
- Basic measures of fluency
- Speech/language development
- Other Measures (DDK)
- Interactions between variables
20Basic Measures of Fluency
- Frequency, Duration, and Type of Speech
Disfluencies
Most CommonDisfluency Type
Frequency ()
Duration (ms)
Prolongation Index ()
Other
7
(In)audible Sound
Prolongation
Whole-Word
26
Repetition
20
N
100
N
90
N
94
Sound/Syllable
Repetition
47
21Basic Measures of Fluency
- Measures of Severity and Chronicity
Iowa Scale
SPI
SSI
N
100
N
81
N
76
22Speech and Language Development
23Speech and Language Development
- No significant differences in fluency of children
with normal vs. disordered phonology (similar
findings for language)
25.00
20.00
Disordered Phonology
Normal Phonology
15.00
10.00
5.00
0.00
Frequency
Iowa Score
SPI Score
Duration
SSI Score
24Speech and Language Development
- Patterns of phonological errors
35
Disordered Phonology
30
No. of Children Exhibiting Process
Normal Phonology
(based on guidelines of Edwards Shriberg, 1983
Grunwell, 1982 McReynolds Elbert, 1981
Stoel-Gammon Dunn,
1985)
25
20
15
10
5
0
VOC
DP
LAB
DA
FCD
LCR
ALV
INT
IV
ID
WSD
FDV
GL
ST
VF
PAL
GR
VEL
SCR
LAT
AFF
25Other Measures
26Treatment Recommendations
27Relationships Between Stuttering and Childs Age
- No significant relationships between speech
fluency and chronological age
r .18p .12
r .07p .47
Age
Age
Severity
Frequency
28Relationship between Fluency and Time Since Onset
- Children stuttering longer more likely to produce
sound prolongations
60
50
Percent of Subjects
40
30
20
10
0
Whole-word
Sound/Syllable
Sound Prolongations
Repetitions
repetitions
29Relationships Between Measures of Stuttering
- Expected strong correlations between basic
measures (frequency, duration, type) and derived
measures of severity and chronicity (SSI, SPI,
etc.) - Also, expected strong correlations between
measures of severity (SSI) and measures of
chronicity (SPI)
30Relationships between Stuttering and Language
- No relationship between measures of stuttering
behaviors and... - overall language development
- phonological development
- DDK rates
- No apparent differences in fluency of children
with normal vs. disordered speech/language
development
31Relationships Between Language Measures
- In these children who stutter, there was a
significant co-occurrence of - below-normal DDK rates
- below-normal language
- disordered phonology
- Interesting interactions between language,
phonology, motor production and stuttering
32Stuttering and Treatment Recommendations
65
Treatment
45
No Treatment / Reevaluation
40
No Treatment / No Reevaluation
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
StockerProbe
Frequency
Prolongation
Iowa Scale
SSI
SPI
Duration
Index
33Discussion
- Results provide data about howchildren perform
on commonly used measures of stuttering and
speech/ language development during a diagnostic
evaluation - Results also provide a means for evaluating the
diagnostic practice utilized by the clinicians in
this clinic
34Stuttering and Speech/ Language Development
- Present findings support prior reports that
children who stutter are more likely to exhibit
disordered phonology - Findings also suggest that some children who
stutter may havedifficulty with diadochokinetic
rates - Interaction between DDK, language, and phonology
should be examined
35Uses of the Data Set
- Data provide indication of factors that might be
involved in onset of stuttering - Clinicians can use these data as a reference to
determine how their clients compare to other
children who stutter - Results provide information about the
characteristics of children referred for
treatment by this set of clinicians
36Diagnostic Benchmarks
- Data-based benchmarks for comparing treatment
recommendations
37Future Directions
- Replicate and extend findings using children
evaluated at NU - Standardize diagnostic battery
- Develop templates based on results of these
children that can facilitate comparison to other
datasets - Examine relationships between language,
phonology, and motor development in children who
stutter