Aphasia : struggling for understanding /

What if your ability to speak or understand speech was taken away with no warning and you struggled to find words that just won't come? This is what happens to people with aphasia, which occurs when the language centers of the brain are damaged by stroke or brain injury. While it affects more t...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full text (MCPHS users only)
Other Authors: Softly, Pat (Producer)
Format: Electronic Video
Language:English
Published: New York, NY : Filmakers Library, 2009
Series:Academic Video Online
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Description
Summary:What if your ability to speak or understand speech was taken away with no warning and you struggled to find words that just won't come? This is what happens to people with aphasia, which occurs when the language centers of the brain are damaged by stroke or brain injury. While it affects more than one million Americans, many people have never heard of it. But there are ways to help aphasics express themselves. Language pathologist Susan Watts explains: 'We can't cure aphasia - we can't fix the brain when it is affected by stroke - but sometimes people can learn new words and learn new ways to communicate.' This film is about two people faced with the daunting task of learning to speak again despite the pervasive sentiment that, 'a person without language is a non-person.' One had practiced law for 37 years; the other owned a contracting business. Both make progress with the considerable assistance of their compassionate families.
Item Description:Title from resource description page (viewed November 09, 2015).
Physical Description:1 online resource (14 min.)
Playing Time:00:14:00
Language:In English.