Affiliation: | 1. THE JOHN F. KENNEDY INSTITUTE AND THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Psychology Department, Children's Hospital, 200 Henry Clay Ave., New Orleans, Louisiana 70118 Psychology Department, The John F. Kennedy Institute, 707 N. Broadway, Baltimore, Maryland 21205.;2. THE JOHN F. KENNEDY INSTITUTE AND THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE |
Abstract: | The popularity and reported success of biofeedback treatment for neuromuscular disorders has occurred despite a lack of research identifying the critical variables responsible for therapeutic gain. In this study, we assessed the degree to which severe neurological dysfunction could be improved by using one of the components present in all biofeedback treatment, contingency management. Three cases of orofacial dysfunction were treated by reinforcing specific improvements reliably detectable without the use of biofeedback equipment. The results showed that contingency management procedures alone were sufficient to improve overt motor responses but, unlike biofeedback treatment, did not produce decreases in the hypertonic muscle groups associated with the trained motor behavior. The findings suggest that sophisticated, expensive biofeedback equipment may not be necessary in treating some neuromuscular disorders and that important clinical gains may be achieved by redesigning the patient's daily environment to be contingently therapeutic, rather than only accommodating the disabilities of the physically handicapped. |