4.0 Article

Clinical Practice Patterns of Speech-Language Pathologists Delivering Dysphagia Services to Persons with COPD: Analysis of Survey Outcomes

Journal

SEMINARS IN SPEECH AND LANGUAGE
Volume 42, Issue 5, Pages 363-383

Publisher

THIEME MEDICAL PUBL INC
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1735846

Keywords

dysphagia; clinical practice patterns; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; swallowing disorders; respiratory disease

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The study found that SLPs use a variety of methods in the assessment and treatment of swallowing in COPD patients, including clinical swallow examination, videofluoroscopic swallowing study, and respiratory-related measures. Compensatory strategy training is preferred for dysphagia treatment in COPD, but respiratory-swallow pattern training and expiratory muscle strength training are also increasingly used. SLPs report a comprehensive, individualized patient-centered care approach with adjunctive respiratory-focused methods in dysphagia evaluation and treatment practice for persons with COPD.
Swallowing impairments co-occur with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) leading to aspiration, disease exacerbations, and malnutrition. This pilot survey study aimed to identify current clinical practice patterns for swallowing evaluation and treatment in persons with COPD. A 35-question Qualtrics survey was deployed to medical speech-language pathology (SLP) social media sites and professional boards; flyers were distributed at a professional conference. Forty-eight SLPs completed the study. SLPs routinely include a clinical swallow examination (96%), videofluoroscopic swallowing study (79%), adjunctive respiratory measures (respiratory rate [83%], and pulse oximetry [67%], respiratory-swallow pattern [77%]) but less frequently include fiberoptic endoscopic evaluation of swallowing (23%). Self-reported advanced clinical experience and expert respiratory analysis skills were associated with adjunctive respiratory measure (respiratory rate, pulse oximetry) inclusion during assessment. Compensatory strategy training (77%) is a preferred treatment for dysphagia in COPD; however, respiratory-swallow pattern training and expiratory muscle strength training are increasing in use. SLPs self-report a comprehensive, individualized patient-centered care approach with inclusion of adjunctive respiratory-focused methods in dysphagia evaluation and treatment practice in persons with COPD. Advances in the identification of the integral role of respiratory function in swallowing integrity may be translating to clinical practice methods for dysphagia management in persons with COPD.

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