Aphasia awareness
Manage episode 388069919 series 3357102
June 2022 was National Aphasia Awareness month This week’s episode, Shannon Jackson, The Peoples Nurse interviewed Doreen Mendez-Sierra VP of Community Outreach & Education for the National Aphasia Association regarding her personal journey with Aphasia and how National Aphasia Association is helping educate the public about Aphasia.
What is Aphasia
It is an impairment of language, affecting the production or comprehension of speech and the ability to read or write. Aphasia is always due to injury to the brain-most commonly from a stroke, particularly in older individuals. But brain injuries resulting in Aphasia may also arise from head trauma, brain tumors, or infections.
Aphasia can be so severe as to make communication with the patient almost impossible, or it can be very mild. It may affect mainly a single aspect of language use, such as the ability to retrieve the names of objects, or the ability to put words together into sentences, or the ability to read. More commonly, however, multiple aspects of communication are impaired, while some channels remain accessible for a limited exchange of information.
For more information on Aphasia, please visit the https://www.aphasia.org/aphasia
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