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Attitudes Towards Stuttering:a Preliminary Study on the Unhelpful Thoughts and Beliefs about Stuttering Questionnaire in Croatia (CROSBI ID 657026)

Prilog sa skupa u zborniku | sažetak izlaganja sa skupa | međunarodna recenzija

Klarin, Ena ; Leko Krhen, Ana ; Jelčić Jakšić, Suzana Attitudes Towards Stuttering:a Preliminary Study on the Unhelpful Thoughts and Beliefs about Stuttering Questionnaire in Croatia // BOOK OF ABSTRACTS ; The 9th International Conference of the Faculty of Education and Rehabilitation Sciences University of Zagreb Zagreb, Croatia, 17 – 19 May, 2017 / Sekušak Galešev, S. (ur.). Zagreb: Edukacijsko-rehabilitacijski fakultet Sveučilišta u Zagrebu, 2017. str. 113-113

Podaci o odgovornosti

Klarin, Ena ; Leko Krhen, Ana ; Jelčić Jakšić, Suzana

engleski

Attitudes Towards Stuttering:a Preliminary Study on the Unhelpful Thoughts and Beliefs about Stuttering Questionnaire in Croatia

Along with disrupted speech fluency, people who stutter often develop a fear of speaking or fear of social situations that may lead to the emergence of social anxiety disorder. This was a subject of numerous studies during last decades and specific questionnaires had been developed to assess relationship between stuttering and anxiety. Unhelpful Thoughts and Beliefs About Stuttering questionnaire (UTBAS, St Clare et al. 2009) was developed recently and have been applied since to evaluate the frequency and belief in thoughts about stuttering and the degree of anxiety induced by such thoughts. The aim of our preliminary study was to test Croatian translation of UTBAS (UTBAS-C) on people who stutter and those who do not stutter and to determine whether there is a statistically significant difference between these two groups, or whether people who stutter are more socially anxious than people who do not stutter. Participants were 16 adults who stutter and 16 normally fluent controls, aged 18-40 years. All data were analyzed with nonparametric statistical methods. The results showed statistically significant difference between adults who stutter and those who do not stutter. People who stutter have proven to be significantly more anxious than normally fluent adults. The results of our preliminary study are not unexpected and are consistent with most of those previously done on relationship between stuttering and anxiety. However, as there is a lack of specific instruments in Croatian language that can be used in diagnosing adults who stutter, especially their attitudes and beliefs, our translation of and further research on Unhelpful Thoughts and Beliefs About Stuttering questionnaire should help to fill that absence. This study should also alert clinicians working with adults who stutter of the importance and influence of attitudes and beliefs on therapy outcome.

Stuttering, Social anxiety ; Adults who stutter ; Attitudes ; Beliefs

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Podaci o prilogu

113-113.

2017.

objavljeno

Podaci o matičnoj publikaciji

BOOK OF ABSTRACTS ; The 9th International Conference of the Faculty of Education and Rehabilitation Sciences University of Zagreb Zagreb, Croatia, 17 – 19 May, 2017

Sekušak Galešev, S.

Zagreb: Edukacijsko-rehabilitacijski fakultet Sveučilišta u Zagrebu

978-953-6418-87-9

Podaci o skupu

The 9th International Conference of the Faculty of Education and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Zagreb

predavanje

17.05.2017-19.05.2017

Zagreb, Hrvatska

Povezanost rada

Edukacijsko-rehabilitacijske znanosti, Logopedija, Obrazovne znanosti