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4337050-41148000 Therapy Symposium 2014at Birmingham City University4th-5th September 2014Preliminary programme contentsObservational drawing for people with aphasia – Catriona AndrewCommunication strategy training for people with aphasia: how does current clinical practice reflect the evidence base? – Firle BeckleyAre sound cues easier than meaning cues and can online assessments be used as a productivity tool? – Steve Naylor & Morag BixleyRekindling the love of books - a pilot project exploring whether e-book readers help people to read again after a stroke – Anna CauteRemote therapy in chronic aphasia – Nicholas Cox‘Waiting for Speech and Language Therapy’ – the C-RAMP equips Speech and Language Therapists with an innovative tool to discharge patients from hospital in a safe, efficient and cost-effective manner – Heidi FeldSupported Conversation Training for Healthcare Professionals in Wolverhampton: A Review – Sharron GerrardThe treatment of mild aphasia: a single case study combining the use of multimedia technology and language therapy at the complex sentence and narrative level – Julie HickinRehabilitation of past tense verb production: Are gains evident in untrained items and narrative speech? – Rachel HollandA peer befriending service for people with aphasia in Gloucestershire and Cornwall – Alice HoskingEveryday reading: Attention Training combined with 3 Strategy Therapy – Anne Katherine HvistendahlWhat works in conversation therapy for aphasia, and how? Searching for mechanisms of change and active ingredients – Fiona JohnsonCombining private and NHS therapy and a range of delivery methods to provide intensive and prolonged therapy for a young man with very severe aphasia – Lisa Maendl‘Living with aphasia the best way I can’: a feasibility study exploring solution focused brief therapy for people with aphasia – Sarah Northcott Planning aphasia therapy: The Cookie Theft picture as a tool – Ingvild R?steMemo Test: Standardisation of a computerised test of auditory verbal short-term memory – Christos SalisTraining people with aphasia to use word prediction software for email writing – Lindsey ThielConfidence in conversation: Collaborating between people with primary progressive aphasia (PPA) and their partners when providing conversation-training interventions – Anna Volkmer ................
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