Treatment
Fluency
shaping therapy
Fluency
shaping therapy, also known as "speak more fluently", "prolonged
speech" or "connected speech", trains stutterers to speak
fluently by controlling their breathing, phonation, and articulation
(lips, jaw, and tongue). It is based on operant conditioning techniques.
Stutterers
are trained to reduce their speaking rate by stretching vowels and consonants,
and using other fluency techniques such as continuous airflow and soft
speech contacts. The result is very slow, monotonic, but fluent speech
used only in the speech clinic. After the stutterer masters these fluency
skills, the speaking rate and intonation are increased gradually. This
more normal-sounding, fluent speech is then transferred to daily life
outside the speech clinic, though lack of speech naturalness at the
end of treatment remains a frequent criticism. Fluency shaping approaches
are often taught in intensive group therapy programs, which may take
two to three weeks to complete, but more recently the Camperdown program,
using a much shorter schedule, has been shown to be effective.
Stuttering
modification therapy
The
goal of stuttering modification therapy is not to eliminate stuttering
but to modify it so that stuttering is easier and less effortful. The
rationale is that since fear and anxiety causes increased stuttering,
using easier stuttering and with less fear and avoidance, stuttering
will decrease. The most widely known approach was published by Charles
Van Riper in 1973 and is also known as block modification therapy.
As
proposed by Van Riper, stuttering modification therapy has four overlapping
stages:
* In the first stage, called identification,
the stutterer and clinician identify the core behaviors, secondary behaviors,
and feelings and attitudes that characterize the stuttering.
* In the second stage, called desensitization, the stutterer works to
reduce fear and anxiety by freezing stuttering behaviors, confronting
difficult sounds, words and situations, and intentionally stuttering
("voluntary stuttering").
* In the third stage, called modification, the stutterer learns "easy
stuttering." This is done by "cancellations" (stopping
in a dysfluency, pausing a few moments, and saying the word again);
"pull-outs," or pulling out of a dysfluency into fluent speech;
and "preparatory sets," or looking ahead for words one may
stutter on, and using "easy stuttering" on those words.
* In the fourth stage, called stabilization, the stutterer prepares
practice assignments, makes preparatory sets and pull-outs automatic,
and changes their self-concept from being a person who stutters to being
a person who speaks fluently most of the time but who occasionally stutters
mildly.
Electronic
fluency devices
Altered
auditory feedback, so that stutterers hear their voice differently,
have been used for over 50 years in the treatment of stuttering. Altered
auditory feedback effect can be produced by speaking in chorus with
another person, by providing blocking out the stutterer's voice while
talking (masking), by delaying the stutterer's voice slightly (delayed
auditory feedback) and/or by altering the frequency of the feedback
(frequency altered feedback). Studies of these techniques have had mixed
results, with some stutterers showing substantial reductions in stuttering,
while others improved only slightly or not at all. In a 2006 review
of the efficacy of stuttering treatments, none of the studies on altered
auditory feedback met the criteria for experimental quality, such as
the presence of control groups.
Anti-stuttering
medications
The
effectiveness of pharmacological agents, such as anti-convulsants, anti-depressants,
antipsychotic and antihypertensive medications, and dopamine antagonists
in the treatment of stuttering has been evaluated in studies involving
both adults and children. A comprehensive review of pharmacological
treatments of stuttering in 2006 concluded that few of the drug trials
were methodologically sound. Of those that were, only one, not unflawed
study, showed a reduction in the frequency stuttering to less than 5%
of words spoken. In addition, potentially serious side effects of pharmacological
treatments were noted.
Support
Groups and the Self-Help Movement
With existing behavioral, prosthetic,
and pharmaceutical treatments providing limited relief from the overt
symptoms of stuttering, support groups and the self-help movement continues
to gain popularity and support by professionals and people who stutter.
One of the basic tenets behind the self-help movement is that since
a cure does not exist, quality of living can be improved by improved
acceptance of self and stuttering.