What is it about?
Meaningful participation in life activities is considered best practice in aphasia rehabilitation, yet many clinicians struggle to implement participation-focused intervention in individual therapy sessions. Traditional impairment-based exercises, while important, often fail to address what clients value most - engaging meaningfully in activities that matter to them. This tutorial demonstrates how to use project-based intervention (PBI) in individual sessions through a real case example of Shawn, a guitarist with aphasia who created guitar tutorials for beginners. We outline five evidence-based components: shared decision-making with clients, patient-reported outcomes, collaborative goal setting, developing meaningful projects, and ongoing evaluation. This approach transforms the typical therapist-patient dynamic by positioning clients as experts sharing their knowledge and skills. Projects provide authentic contexts for practicing communication while working toward personally meaningful goals. Shawn's transformation from struggling with traditional language tasks to confidently teaching guitar demonstrates how PBI addresses language impairment, identity reconstruction, and social participation simultaneously within activities that clients actually care about. The tutorial includes practical tools, sample goals, and documentation examples to help clinicians implement this approach within real-world constraints like productivity requirements and reimbursement considerations.
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Why is it important?
This tutorial addresses a critical gap between evidence-based practice recommendations and clinical reality. While participation-focused intervention is considered best practice, most clinicians struggle to implement it, especially in individual sessions where insurance typically limits services. Our framework makes participation-based intervention practical and scalable to real-world clinical constraints. By providing concrete tools, step-by-step guidance, and a detailed case example, we enable clinicians to move beyond traditional drill-based therapy toward meaningful, client-centered intervention that addresses the whole person with aphasia, not just their language impairment.
Perspectives
Project-based intervention represents a fundamental shift in how we conceptualize aphasia therapy - from viewing clients as recipients of treatment to positioning them as collaborators and experts. Working with individuals like Shawn has reinforced this belief through direct observation: the contrast between his tentative responses during traditional language tasks and his animated expertise while teaching guitar was remarkable. This approach taps into what clients already know and care about, creating contexts where their communication serves authentic purposes. I hope this tutorial helps clinicians move beyond drill-based approaches toward interventions that honor clients' expertise while simultaneously addressing their communication goals.
Katie Strong
Central Michigan University
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Supporting Participation Through Project-Based Intervention: A Tutorial for Working With People With Aphasia in Individual Sessions, American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, September 2024, American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA),
DOI: 10.1044/2024_ajslp-24-00094.
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