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  • Aphasia and friendship: Str...
    Madden, Elizabeth B.; Bislick, Lauren; Wallace, Sarah E.; Therrien, Michelle C.S.; Goff-Albritton, Rachel

    Journal of communication disorders, May-June 2023, 2023 May-Jun, 2023-05-00, 20230501, Letnik: 103
    Journal Article

    •Many individuals with aphasia maintained old friendships and developed new friendships, particularly with another person with aphasia.•On average, perceived friendship satisfaction and support improved over time; however some individuals with aphasia reported feeling dissatisfied and not well supported by friends.•Standardized language testing and self-reported communicative participation had opposite relationships with perceived friendship support.•Aphasia can have lasting social implications. Friendships are an important contributor to quality of life. Due to communication and other stroke-related challenges, people with aphasia (PWA) can experience negative friendship changes, which have been linked with increased physiological distress. This study examined friendship experiences over time for PWA to understand how friendships evolve throughout the course of stroke and aphasia recovery. Fifteen stroke survivors with chronic aphasia completed language testing and a friendship questionnaire created by the researchers. The friendship questionnaire was composed of open and closed-ended questions that asked PWA to reflect back on their friendship satisfaction, support, activities, and communication during the time before aphasia and during the acute stage of recovery. The questionnaire also addressed their current friendships in the present-day chronic stage of recovery, as well as questions about an ideal friendship. Quantitative and qualitative methods were used to examine the data, with quantitative findings reported in this study. The majority of PWA reported maintaining some friendships and developing new friendships, often with a fellow stroke survivor with aphasia; however, a few PWA in this study were not able to maintain or develop any new friendships. Average ratings of perceived friendship satisfaction and support improved from the acute to chronic stage, nearing those of the ratings pre-stroke, yet there was greater variability in the chronic stage with some currently feeling dissatisfied and not well supported. Aphasia severity, as measured by a standardized assessment, had a negative relationship with perceived friendship support. In contrast, perception of communicative participation had a positive relationship with friendship support. This work highlights lasting social implications of aphasia. The overall health of PWA deserves greater attention, including interventions targeting friendship maintenance and development. Continued stakeholder-engaged research and clinical practice focused on the social and emotional consequences of aphasia on PWA, as well as their friends and family, is needed to assist all involved in aphasia recovery achieve better friendships and well-being.