A prospective 14-year follow-up study of the persistence and recovery of stuttering

Útdráttur

Purpose: To document the trajectory of early childhood stuttering longitudinally for 14. years with a consideration on the features of overt and covert stuttering related to recovery status. Method: Thirty-eight participants were observed longitudinally at three different time points: early childhood (Occasion 1), middle childhood (Occasion 2), and late adolescence (Occasion 3). Data collection involved speech samples and reports of stuttering experiences. Recovery on Occasion 3 was estimated through analysis of speech samples, parent and expert judgments, and self- judgement. Two categories of persistence were used: persistent-subjective (no observable stuttering) and persistent-objective (observable stuttering). Results: The recovery rate was 65.6 %. The majority of the participants showed minimal disfluent speech with 88 % showing less than 1 % syllables stuttered and 97 % showing less than 3 % syllables stuttered in the collected speech samples. All participants classified as persistent reported covert symptoms of stuttering. No relapses in recovery were observed between Occasion 2 and Occasion 3. Late recovery was only observed for those classified as persistent-subjective on Occasion 2. About 64 % of the participants showing observable stuttering (persistent-objective) on Occasion 2 showed no observable stuttering (persistent-subjective) on Occasion 3. Conclusions: Children continue to recover from early childhood stuttering as they age.The inclusion of self-reports adds to the understanding of recovery especially concerning the covert stuttering behaviours.

Lýsing

Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors

Efnisorð

Covert stuttering, Longitudinal, Overt stuttering, Persistence, Recovery, Stuttering, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Language and Linguistics, Linguistics and Language, Cognitive Neuroscience, Speech and Hearing, LPN and LVN

Citation

Einarsdóttir, J T, Hermannsdóttir, B & Crowe, K 2024, 'A prospective 14-year follow-up study of the persistence and recovery of stuttering', Journal of Fluency Disorders, vol. 80, 106058. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jfludis.2024.106058

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