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Frequently Asked Questions |
What are the types of speech problems treated at The Speech Foundation Clinic? ?
Young adults who suffer from Stammering or Stuttering.
Children who are not fluent or whose speech is not clear and easy to understand
Adults who mispronounce certain speech sounds like R or L or S.
Males who speak with a female voice (Puberphonia).
or anyone whose voice quality is weak, hoarse or unsteady (Dysphonia).
These are some of the speech problems we treat.
What is Stammering / Stuttering ?
Stammering or Stuttering is a speech problem which occurs
when the speaker is not able to maintain a smooth forward flow of speech
and experiences recurrent blocks in the production of speech sounds in
conversational speech, particularly when excited or under psychological
stress. A person who stammers often has difficulty in smoothly coordinating
breathing exhalations during speech caused by lack of synchrony between
his thoughts and his speaking machine. Most persons who stammer attempt
to avoid or substitute particular words and situations. The problem has
both physical and psychological overtones. Stammering is not a disease
but an undesirable speech habit with causes havoc with the sufferer's
self-confidence.
Is Stammering different from Stuttering
?
Stammering and Stuttering mean exactly the same condition. It is called
'Stammering' in England while Americans call it Stuttering. No difference
What is the incidence of stammering?
Stammering is said to affect approximately 1% of the global population
and occurs uniformly regardless of race, culture, education or socio-economic
status.
Does it affect only males?
Stammering is predominantly a 'male' condition and 80% of all persons
who stammer are male. It is usually known to affect the first-born male
child.
Is stammering inherited?
A significant majority of persons who stammer (65%) have a family history
of the disorder; usually the father who stammers or speaks at a rapid
rate. Nearly always, stammering starts before the child is 5 years of
age. If left untreated, it peaks in severity around the age of 10 to 18
years.
What is the real cause for stammering?
A person who stammers knows precisely what he wants to say but cannot,
for the moment, say it because of an involuntary repetition, prolongation
or cessation of the speech sound.
Research suggests that the disorder might be caused due to a 'neurological
mistiming' during the act of speech which leaves the person who stammers
confused about when exactly to say the word he wants to say.
Speaking is not merely the movement of the tongue but involves a fine
coordination of both mental and physical processes. Like all other physical
actions, the act of speech is the result of neuro-muscular coordination
which involves the transmitting of electro-chemical messages from the
brain to the appropriate muscle groups. For everyone of us, this neuro-muscular
system sometimes trips and fails especially during moments of inadequate
emotional control. Haven't we all found the quality of our speech delivery
changing with our feelings as we experience thrill, anger, fear, joy or
other such strong emotions?
For the person who stammers, this 'tripping' occurs much more frequently
than it does for normal speakers. Whenever he faces what he perceives
as a 'feared' situation, the person who stammers adopts a mind-set which
triggers off spasms of speech-blocks. Such fears can also center around
certain speech sounds or even certain people.
Dr. Edward Conture, Professor of Speech Pathology at
Syracuse University, New York, talks about what causes stammering :
"Things that cause stammering may be, and probably are, quite different
from the things that keep it going, aggravate or worsen it. For example,
if you mishandle a knife, you may cut your finger. The knife causes the
cut and initial pain. Salt rubbed into the cut makes the pain continue
or even worsen it but the salt does not cause the cut". Dr. Conture
says, scientists "...still haven't found the 'knife' that causes
stammering. However, we do know something about the 'salt' that keeps
it going, makes it worse or aggravates it".
These are aspects which can be changed through self-therapy to help the
person overcome his speaking difficulty.
Why can persons who stammer
sing without difficulty?
One more of the unusual facts about stammering is that even the person
with the severest stammer can sing fluently without any speech blocks.
This is because when we sing a song, we know exactly when to say the words
and there is no ambiguity in our minds about this timing. In conversational
speech however, we cannot bank on any such cues but as normally fluent
speakers, most of us do not need these cues. However, without these cues,
the speech of a person who stammers becomes disoriented, because of his
'wrongly tuned' neurological speech-timing system. He experiences difficulty
in maintaining a smooth forward flow of words in feared situations.
What are these 'feared situations'?
Actually, all persons who stammer have periods of fluency when they are
emotionally relaxed but revert back to dysfluent speech under stress.
Answering the roll call in class, speaking on the telephone, talking to
someone in authority, speaking in a group, attending a job interview,
etc. are some such pressure situations which might cause an increase in
stammering behaviour.
So is stammering a psychological condition?
Frequently repeated, experiences of stammering arouse fear in the mind
of the child who stammers. With growing years, these fears keep snowballing
until the person who stammers begins to experience tremendous frustration,
anxiety, shame, embarrassment, even guilt every time he opens his mouth
to speak. He begins to recoil from speaking. The smirks on the faces of
his listeners which his speech sometimes elicits, do nothing to help his
self confidence. In every other respect, except speaking ability, the
person who stammers is a completely normal human being, as good or bad
as the rest of us. In fact most persons who stammer are sensitive and
intelligent people.
So the psychological repercussions of his stammering can very well keep
the problem alive by catching him in a vicious circle. The more he is
afraid, the more he stammers and that in turn increases his fear of speech.
Any treatment-plan must consider this aspect carefully.
Isn't there any medicine for stammering?
Speech is one of our body's strongest habits and stammered speech is also
a habit. Stammering is not a disease and therefore, it cannot be treated
through medicines. The stammering child or adult has to be helped to develop
a new, more fluent manner of speech through an intensive re-orientation
program which focuses on modifying his physical manner of talking as well
as changing his mental attitude towards the problem. With the greater
sense of emotional and intellectual balance that he gains, the person
who stammers finds his attempts to develop speech getting successful results.
In their desperate search for fluency, many in India subject themselves
to a myriad of so-called treatments ranging from swallowing vile concoctions
to allowing themselves to be pierced with needles and cut with knives.
Actually, such treatments hold no relevance to the problem of stammering
and are only placebos which cause greater frustration in the long run
by corroding the sufferer's faith in a real and long-lasting cure.
Do tranquilizers help?
Some psychiatrists might prescribe tranquilizers in the belief that relieving
stress would help speech fluency. Such drugs usually complicate, rather
than resolve the issue and are strongly de-recommended for the treatment
of stammering by most speech pathologists.
Dr. Peter Rosenberger, M.D., Director, Learning Disorders Unit at Harvard
Medical School, Boston says "Since the increase in stammering during
anxiety is a common experience, it might be assumed that drugs that relieve
anxiety would be beneficial. However, minor tranquilizers have been tried
many times without success".
What about hypnosis?
Hypnosis has also shown unpromising results in the treatment of stammering.
A few persons who stammer who might become fluent while under a trance
invariably return to stammering when out of the hypnotic state.
So what is the treatment that works?
In the final analysis, stammering can be overcome if the sufferer seeks
scientific, professional guidance and is ready to work towards achieving
speech fluency through regular practice of therapeutic techniques. It
certainly cannot disappear by ingesting some magic potent!
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