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Implications of evaluating and intervening with incipient stutterers
Authors:Cheryl A. Panelli  Stephen C. McFarlane  Kenneth G. Shipley
Affiliation:Reno Speech and Hearing Clinic, 560 Mill Street, Reno, Nevada 89502, USA;School of Medical Sciences, University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada 89557, USA
Abstract:A study was conducted to investigate the factors involved in the recovery from incipient stuttering without therapeutic intervention. Fifteen subjects were seen on two occasions, once for an initial evaluation after the reported onset of stuttering, and for a second evaluation to determine if they had recovered or become chronic stutterers. Within the constraints of a small sample, several findings are presented: (1) 80% of the children recovered spontaneously from stuttering, (2) subjects who exhibited more types and frequencies of disfluencies upon onset had a poorer prognosis for recovery, (3) the age of onset, if under 4 years, had little bearing on recovery, and (4) children who were seen professionally soon after disfluency onset had the greatest prognosis for recovery. Possible implications of these results are discussed.
Keywords:Address correspondence to: Stephen C. McFarlane   Ph.D.   Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology   School of Medical Sciences   University of Nevada   Reno   Nevada 89557   USA.
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