Australian attitudes towards stuttering: A cross-sectional study

•Australian stuttering attitudes have not been studied using a standard measure of public attitudes towards stuttering.•Reported attitudes reflected some negative stereotypes.•Participants generally had more positive attitudes than other samples worldwide.•Younger females who were more educated, emp...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of fluency disorders Vol. 69; p. 105865
Main Authors Lefort, Meryl K.R., Erickson, Shane, Block, Susan, Carey, Brenda, St. Louis, Kenneth O.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Elsevier Inc 01.09.2021
Elsevier Science Ltd
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Summary:•Australian stuttering attitudes have not been studied using a standard measure of public attitudes towards stuttering.•Reported attitudes reflected some negative stereotypes.•Participants generally had more positive attitudes than other samples worldwide.•Younger females who were more educated, employed and monolingual were more positive. Negative reactions experienced by people who stutter often stem from unfounded attitudes and beliefs in the community. There is a need to better understand current public attitudes towards stuttering in Australia. The purpose of this study was to: (a) explore the attitudes and knowledge of a large sample of the Australian public using the Public Opinion Survey of Human Attitudes-Stuttering [POSHA-S], (b) identify how the reported attitudes towards, and knowledge of, stuttering compare to existing data, and (c) identify differences between groups for variables identified. A cross-sectional population study using the POSHA-S was conducted in Melbourne, Australia. Comparisons of the attitudes towards stuttering of this sample were made with data from other worldwide samples on the POSHA-S database. The influence on attitudes to stuttering of variables including age, gender, education level, country of birth, employment status and number of languages spoken was explored. The Overall Stuttering Score (OSS) of the Australian sample was higher than the median score on the POSHA-S database. This suggests that the Australian public holds more positive attitudes than those other countries represented in the database. Being younger, more educated, employed, female, monolingual, born in Australia and not familiar with people who stutter were related to more positive attitudes for this sample. Some negative stereotypes towards stuttering were noted; people who stutter were identified as ‘shy and fearful’, and ‘nervous and excitable’. While the Australian public has generally positive attitudes towards stuttering, these attitudes still reflect some ‘stuttering stereotypes’.
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ISSN:0094-730X
1873-801X
DOI:10.1016/j.jfludis.2021.105865