Those Who Stutter Find Hope | stuttering
Sunday, October 26th, 2008
Among PWS, people who stutter as they call themselves, there are mixed feelings about devices that help you stop stuttering. The reason for these mixed feelings is that they do not work for everyone. Nevertheless, those they do work for are absolutely amazed at the difference.
It can be an awkward situation when you are waiting for a person who stutters to finish delivering a thought. There is always a temptation to finish the sentence for them. But from their perspective that would be interrupting and rude. Instead, try to put yourself in their shoes.
Your voice turns into a mechanical warble like a CD player that is stuck. Your muscles spasm in your throat pumping out bursts of air as you try to will your vocal cords to defeat electrical impulses from your brain. These signals are to blame for the biological short-circuit called stuttering that is largely a medical mystery.
Many of the 3 million Americans who stutter work in silence, in jobs where talking is not required to complete a task. Doctors do not know exactly why this kind of device works, because they do not know the neurological roots of stuttering. Scientists are using brain scans to try to pinpoint its origins, but progress has been slow, in part because spending for stuttering research has not been as robust as for deadly diseases.
Just think, a tiny, hearing-aid-like device called SpeechEasy that fits inside the ear can change a stutterer’s life. It is worn in the ear. It echoes the speaker’s own words at a slight delay and different pitch. There are other devices that either echo words at a delay or change the pitch, but only SpeechEasy does both and fits inside the ear. The delayed echo causes what is known as the choral effect. Research has shown that when people who stutter sing or speak in unison with others, they become more fluent. Mel Tillis, Garth Brooks and Scatman John are good example of this.
The makers of SpeechEasy says one-third of the people who try SpeechEasy are helped significantly, and another third are helped somewhat. Experts do agree that it is the best solution for most people, especially if started in childhood. Many who stutter begin before age 5. In addition, more than half of preschool-age children who stutter, especially girls, will outgrow the problem, though doctors cannot predict which ones will.
Speech therapists help increase normal speech by teaching one or more strategies to minimize the stuttering. Like slowing down or starting a sentence with a different kind of breath. Stutterers need to understand the vocal mechanics that interfere with speech to help them avoid linguistic pitfalls.
Therefore, which treatment works best often depends on how long the person has been stuttering. Long struggles with stuttering can lead to speech habits that are deeply rooted and more difficult to break. The stuttering therapy focuses on teaching the person to confront the stuttering and control how to enter into a troublesome word as well as how to release that word with less tension and struggling.


According to a news article in 
