Two years ago, Cynthia Blinebery had an inkling she might have Parkinsonās. Her voice was weak, and her husband often asked her to repeat things. She ran out of breath when speaking and experienced tremors in her hands and fingers. Her father and aunt had Parkinsonās. A neurological exam confirmed her suspicion.
A speech evaluation at Ńż¼§Ö±²„ State Universityās Speech and Hearing Clinic determined she was stimulable (able to speak with intent when prompted) and could benefit from the . Blinebery said her father had lost the ability to speak due to Parkinsonās and the Ravenna resident jumped at the opportunity.
Two days a week she works with Grace Puin, a graduate student studying speech language pathology in the Speech Pathology and Audiology Program in the School of Health Sciences. Punin, who plans to graduate with her master's degree in 2025, is supervised by Lynn Berk, M.A., CCC-SLP, one of the programās licensed SPEAK OUT! providers.
For 30 minutes, Puin puts Blinebery through a series of exercises focused on speaking with intent. They start with warm-up exercises that include gliding through pitch variations to increase muscle strength and flexibility for speech. As Blinebery enunciates, Puin prompts her with flowing hand movements much the way a conductor messages an orchestra.
Counting, reading and conversation round out the drills that get progressively harder over time. The primary focus of therapy is speaking with intent by using voluntary control of muscular movements when speaking.
āItās brought me out of my shell a little bit,ā she said. āMy voice has gotten stronger and Iām breathing better. It's been very helpful.ā Blinebery goes online for additional exercises about every other day and now speaks with intent to family and friends and during visits to the physical therapist. Her dog Aaron ignores it, but she's not discouraged.
āThe key to SPEAK OUT! is the practice at home because itās based on the principles of motor learning, which emphasizes practice, practice,ā said Puin, who secured a bachelor of science degree in speech pathology and audiology in 2023.
Ńż¼§Ö±²„ Stateās Speech Pathology and Audiology program was awarded a grant by to develop Ohio's only SPEAK OUT! Therapy and Research Center. SPEAK OUT! has some two dozen lessons that can be modified based on the patientās strengths or weaknesses. An evidence-based program, SPEAK OUT! helps people diagnosed with Parkinsonās and related neurological disorders regain and retain their speech and swallowing for a lifetime by training patients to āspeak with intent,ā transitioning speech from an automatic function to an intentional act.
āThis grant is an amazing opportunity for our student clinicians to be simultaneously involved in the clinical and research components of our field, obtain experience with medical populations, and provide community outreach,ā said Erin Kolonich, M.A., CCC-SLP, who secured the grant.
According to Parkinson Voice Project, up to 90 percent of people with Parkinsonās will develop a weak voice, decreasing the ability to speak effectively with other listeners, which affects quality of life and safety. The comprehensive program was developed by Parkinson Voice Project in 2010 and includes education and ongoing group support for individual speech therapy and vocal deficits related to Parkinsonās disease.
āOur vision is to make quality speech therapy accessible to people with Parkinsonās worldwide,ā said Samantha Elandary, Parkinson Voice Projectās founder and CEO. āWe want people with Parkinsonās and related neurological disorders to regain and retain their speech.ā
Ńż¼§Ö±²„ Stateās Speech and Hearing Clinic is now accepting referrals for this program throughout the state. All sessions can be attended either on the Ńż¼§Ö±²„ Campus or virtually through a computer or tablet. Contact Erin Kolonich at ejohnson@kent.edu, or call the Ńż¼§Ö±²„ State Speech and Hearing Clinic at (330) 672-2672 and reference the SPEAK OUT! Program.