Abstract

BackgroundEarly communication intervention services rendered by speech-language therapists and audiologists to families of infants and young children with feeding difficulties, hearing loss or emerging communication disorders should be implemented throughout South Africa. Early intervention can ameliorate risks, enhance development and may prevent further delays. Based on research initiated during a community-service year experience in a rural subdistrict, an incremental process of establishing accessible early communication intervention services was deemed feasible. Such a process cannot be successful if the collaboration of primary healthcare personnel and managers is not ensured.ObjectivesThe aim of the article was to describe the perceptions of primary healthcare personnel with regard to expansion of early communication intervention services to infants at risk of developmental delay.MethodA qualitative descriptive survey design was followed. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 20 primary healthcare nurses and sisters and eight primary healthcare programme managers in Ditsobotla subdistrict in the North West province of South Africa.ResultsThe participants indicated that by improving team work, developing training programmes and evaluating identification methods and resources, the step-by-step rollout of early communication intervention functions on four organisational levels may be a realistic goal for sustainable services in the resource-limited district.ConclusionThe positive perceptions and contributions by participants promise a rich human-resource basis for transdisciplinary collaboration between speech-language therapists, audiologists and primary healthcare personnel in order to reduce the burden of early communication disorders in a rural district.

Highlights

  • Communication intervention, an evidence-based approach to the comprehensive management of feeding difficulties, hearing impairment and emerging communication disorders in infants and young children, is established at most tertiary-level public hospitals and private practices in South Africa

  • The lack of clear procedures, evidence-based practice guidelines and health policy on how to implement early communication intervention in Primary Health Care (PHC), as well as the fact that early communication intervention is an unknown service amongst most healthcare professionals and the public in general, may be some of the reasons why few speechlanguage therapists and audiologists respond to the challenge to establish formal community-based early communication intervention programmes

  • PHC personnel indicated that parents, grandparents and other caregivers are either barriers or helpful resources when the developmental history of infants and young children has to be collected at clinics

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Summary

Introduction

An evidence-based approach to the comprehensive management of feeding difficulties, hearing impairment and emerging communication disorders in infants and young children, is established at most tertiary-level public hospitals and private practices in South Africa. Communication intervention services rendered by speech-language therapists and audiologists to families of infants and young children with feeding difficulties, hearing loss or emerging communication disorders should be implemented throughout South Africa. Based on research initiated during a community-service year experience in a rural subdistrict, an incremental process of establishing accessible early communication intervention services was deemed feasible. Such a process cannot be successful if the collaboration of primary healthcare personnel and managers is not ensured

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