May 16, 2016
RICHARDSON, Texas (Ivanhoe Newswire) -
As many as one million Americans live with Parkinson’s
disease, but with no cure, living with it can be helped by re-learning some
simple things, like speaking up.
As
a marine, 37-year-old Jason Arwine trained to
fight a variety of enemies … but Parkinson’s disease wasn’t one of them.
The
biological sneak attack first left a tremor in his hand, a slight limp … and
then his voice got quiet.
“And
I kind of say, I lost part of me. Being in the military I’m used to yelling and
having people hear me,” Arwine told Ivanhoe.
Jason
found his voice … and an ally … in the Parkinson voice project. Since
Parkinson’s patients lose the ability to speak and to swallow, the projects
two-part therapy includes pumping up patients’ voices to reach between 72 to 90
decibels, and coping with a crowd that’s loud.
Patients
encourage each other to use their vocal muscles instead of losing them.
Samantha
Elandary, MA, CCC-SLP, Founder and CEO of the Parkinson Voice Project said,
“But when we ask them to speak with intent, to speak like you are the CEO of a
company, then they automatically do everything that they need to in order to
produce a clear and intelligible speaking voice.”
Jason’s
wife, Heather, told Ivanhoe, “We’re going on kind of like normal people right
now. We’re planning to buy a house and start a family, and do those things that
normal couples do and normal couples that are young and still have a whole life
in front of them.”
And
thanks to the voice project, many Parkinson’s patients do.
Samantha
Elandary’s non-profit program is being replicated around the country, helping
to prevent aspiration pneumonia, the leading cause of death among Parkinson’s
patients. The Parkinson voice project doesn’t charge patients. It‘s funded
through donations and a pay-it-forward concept.
Contributors
to this news report include: Don Wall, Field Producer; Brogan Morris, Assistant
Producer; Mark Montgomery, Videographer and Brent Sucher, Editor
http://www.kcrg.com/content/news/Parkinson-Voice-Project-Sound-Off-379621791.html
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