Clinical Trial: Randomized Clinical Trial of Phonological Interventions

Study Status: Recruiting
Recruit Status: Unknown status
Study Type: Interventional

Official Title: The Contribution of a Speech Perception Intervention to the Prevention of Phonological Awareness Deficits in Children With Speech Sound Disorders

Brief Summary: Recent research reveals genetic and symptomatic overlap among children with speech sound disorders (i.e., those who (misarticulate more sounds than would be expected for their age) and children with dyslexia (i.e., those who struggle to learn to read). Children who have speech sound disorders as preschoolers are at risk for the later emergence of dyslexia, a risk that often reveals itself in the form of poor phonological awareness skills during the preschool period. Traditional speech therapy methods focus on articulation accuracy and do not focus on the child's more abstract knowledge of the sound system of the language. The ultimate objective of this research program is to prevent reading disability in children who present with speech sounds disorders. The relative effectiveness of different interventions to help these children achieve age-appropriate phonological processing skills prior to school entry will be investigated. It is expected that a combination of treatment approaches that focus on speech perception skills and vocabulary knowledge will have a superior impact on phonological awareness in comparison with a treatment approach that focuses solely on articulation accuracy.

Detailed Summary: The 72 children participating in the study will be randomly assigned (with concealment of the randomization sequence from study staff) to one of two Child Speech Interventions: Speech Perception or Speech Production. These interventions will be provided in individualized one-hour treatment sessions once per week for six consecutive weeks during the first treatment block. During the second 6 week treatment block all children will receive a group phonological awareness intervention. Concurrently their parents will be randomly assigned to receive instruction in the provision of a home program, either Articulation Therapy or Dialogic Reading. This will result in 4 groups of 18 children with each group receiving one of four combinations of intervention: Speech Production Intervention + Articulation Parent Group; Speech Production Intervention + Dialogic Reading Parent Group; Speech Perception Intervention + Articulation Parent Group; and Speech Perception Intervention + Dialogic Reading Parent Group. Assessments will occur pretreatment, after the first treatment block, after the second treatment block, and 9 months after the end of the second treatment block.
Sponsor: McGill University

Current Primary Outcome: Phonological Awareness (Test d'Analyse Auditive en Français [Auditory Analysis Test in French]) [ Time Frame: 12 months post treatment onset ]

Original Primary Outcome: Same as current

Current Secondary Outcome:

  • Articulation Accuracy (Test Francophone de Phonologie, Paul et Rvachew [Test of French Phonology) [ Time Frame: 6 weeks post treatment onset; 12 weeks post-treatment onset; 12 months post-treatment onset ]
  • Vocabulary Knowledge (Échelle de Vocabulaire en Image Peabody [Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test - French Edition) [ Time Frame: 12 months post-treatment onset ]
  • Phonological Awareness (Test de Conscience Phonologique, Brosseau-Lapre et Rvachew [Phonological Awareness Test - French Version]) [ Time Frame: 6 weeks post-treatment onset; 12 weeks post-treatment onset ]


Original Secondary Outcome: Same as current

Information By: McGill University

Dates:
Date Received: January 5, 2009
Date Started: November 2008
Date Completion: July 2010
Last Updated: September 22, 2009
Last Verified: September 2009