Sarah J. Wallace
University of Queensland
40 Papers
50 Citations
Sarah J. Wallace is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aphasia & International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 40 publications.
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Papers
Which outcomes are most important to people with aphasia and their families? an international nominal group technique study framed within the ICF
Sarah J. Wallace,Linda Worrall,Tanya Rose,Guylaine Le Dorze,Madeline Cruice,Jytte Isaksen,Anthony Pak Hin Kong,Nina Simmons-Mackie,Nerina Scarinci,Christine Alary Gauvreau +9 more
TL;DR: The results of this study indicate that important treatment outcomes for people living with aphasia most frequently link to the activity/participation and body function components of the ICF.
A core outcome set for aphasia treatment research: The ROMA consensus statement:
Sarah J. Wallace,Linda Worrall,Tanya Rose,Guylaine Le Dorze,Caterina Breitenstein,Katerina Hilari,Edna M. Babbitt,Arpita Bose,Marian C. Brady,Leora R. Cherney,David A. Copland,Madeline Cruice,Pam Enderby,Deborah Hersh,Tami Howe,Helen Kelly,Swathi Kiran,Ann Charlotte Laska,Jane Marshall,Marjorie Nicholas,Janet Patterson,Gill Pearl,Elizabeth Rochon,Miranda Rose,Karen Sage,Steven L. Small,Janet Webster +26 more
TL;DR: An overview of the ROMA process is provided and the WAB-R, GHQ-12, and SAQOL-39 are recommended to be routinely included within phases I–IV aphasia treatment studies.
Which treatment outcomes are most important to aphasia clinicians and managers? An international e-Delphi consensus study
TL;DR: Very high levels of consensus were achieved for outcomes relating to communication between the person with aphasia and their communication partner/s, suggesting that in the clinical environment improved dyadic communicative interaction is an important indicator of treatment success.
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Establishing consensus on a definition of aphasia: an e-Delphi study of international aphasia researchers
Karianne Berg,Jytte Isaksen,Sarah J. Wallace,Madeline Cruice,Nina Simmons-Mackie,Linda Worrall +5 more
TL;DR: A three-round modified e-Delphi study was conducted with aphasia researchers who were members of the Collaboration of Aphasia Trialists and consensus was unable to be achieved with an almost even split across participants on both amendment issues.
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Beyond the statistics: a research agenda in aphasia awareness
Nina Simmons-Mackie,Linda Worrall,Ciara Shiggins,Jytte Isaksen,Ruth McMenamin,Tanya Rose,Yiting Emily Guo,Sarah J. Wallace +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, an important goal of people living with aphasia is to increase awareness of the condition by the general public, however, surveys of the general population do not reflect this.