Orthophonie
Logopedics
Speech and language therapy
These three terms cover the same concept in all countries, with small differences in individual countries reflected in areas of competence or professional
practice.
◊
Definition and areas of competence
The speech and language therapist / logopedist is concerned with communication and with
language, and treats all disorders of speech, voice and spoken and written
language, regardless of aetiology, in children, adolescents, adults and the
elderly.
The speech and language therapist is the professional responsible for the
prevention, assessment, treatment and scientific study of human communication and associated
disorders. In this context, communication encompasses all those processes associated with the comprehension and production of spoken and written
language, as well as appropriate forms of non-verbal communication.
Speech and language therapists / logopedists provide treatment in the following
areas:
-
disorders of articulation
-
speech disorders
-
voice disorders (with a functional cause, as a result of trauma or organic, developmental or
acquired)
-
spoken language disorders
-
written language disorders (dyslexia, dysorthographia, dysgraphia)
-
disorders affecting mathematical and logical reasoning
-
early education and therapy for a variety of disabilities in young children
-
teaching of lip-reading to people who have developed a hearing impairment
-
teaching deaf children to speak, and language therapy for people with acquired hearing impairment
-
aphasia therapy and other speech and language disorders with a neurological origin
-
feeding and swallowing therapy
-
therapy for disorders affecting the Eustachian tube
-
maintaining communication for people
with cerebral disorders associated with aging
Increasingly, speech and language therapists-logopedists are involved in prevention work
(training and informing health professionals and health promotion) and in screening
(early screening for language disorders in children).
Through their work, speech and language therapists-logopedists help people to return to
educational, professional, social and cultural life. They are also involved in disorders arising in the aging adult population, and in the field of illiteracy
(through their specific areas of expertise).
They collaborate with the patient's medical practitioner, their family, and
educational, work or social contacts.
They undertake a preliminary assessment, examining and assessing the disorders
observed, identifying as far as possible their cause and making both diagnosis and
prognosis; they then decide whether therapy is required.
Using individual or group therapy, speech and language therapists-logopedists draw on their clinical experience to employ techniques which will enable all clients to maximise their verbal or non-verbal communicative potential.
◊
Professional practice
Speech and language therapists-logopedists across Europe may practise in different sectors and
settings, according to the particular socio-economic circumstances in their own country:
- in the health sector, in particular in:
-
hospitals
-
therapeutic and rehabilitation centres
-
special medical-educational institutions
-
special centres for children with disabilities (the deaf and hard of hearing, those with motor
disabilities, blind and partially sighted, learning disabilities
-
child psychiatric units
-
nursing homes
-
private practice (this sector has a long history in France and is now becoming established in all other
countries).
- in the education sector:
-
special units
-
mainstream schools which integrate children with disabilities.
- in the area of prevention (special services for prevention and screening for health and social problems)
- in the area of combatting illiteracy
◊
Demographic composition
The profession has a similarly female profile in every country: it is composed of 95% women with an average age of 38-40
years. Speech and language therapy is therefore a young and dynamic profession.
| COUNTRY |
Inhabitants (millions) |
Speech and Language therapists |
Inhabitants per SLT |
|
Austria
¤
|
8.090.000 |
about 1000 |
8.090 |
|
Belgium
•
|
10.170.226 |
3.962* |
2.567 |
|
Cyprus
• |
700.000 |
127 |
5.512
|
|
Czech Republic
□ |
10. 300.000 |
850 |
12.117 |
|
Denmark
• |
5.400.000 |
1150 |
4.695 |
|
Estonia
• |
1.410.000 |
200
|
7.050 |
|
France
• |
62.000.000 |
15.357 |
4.037 |
|
Finland
๏ |
5.255.580 |
1.047 |
5.020 |
|
Germany
□ |
82.259.000 |
16.000 |
5.141 |
|
Greece • |
10.000.000 |
800 |
12.500 |
|
Italy • |
57.000.000 |
8.000 |
7.125 |
|
Ireland • |
4.000.000 |
550 |
7.273 |
|
Latvia
◊ |
2.306.600
|
360 |
6.590 |
|
Luxembourg |
423.700 |
37 |
11.451 |
|
Netherlands
• |
16.000.000 |
4.800 |
3.333 |
|
Norway ◊ |
4.600.000 |
1.150 |
4.000 |
|
Portugal
• |
10.299.000 |
650 |
15.845 |
|
United-Kingdom
• |
58.800.000 |
10.083 |
5.832 |
|
Spain |
39.000.000 |
4.500 |
8.667 |
|
Sweden
• |
9.011.392 |
1180 |
7.636 |
|
Total |
(372.612.926) |
(59.459) |
|
•
updated 1.11.2005