In the past year, the activities of the
SPEAK CLEAR ASSOCIATION OF CAMEROON, SCAC, witnessed a remarkable change with several persons inside and outside of Cameroon being interested and supportive of our work. Since last year, we had a remarkable increase in our membership with many chapters set up in several localities of Cameroon. While struggling to help our adult PWS, we focused particular attention to children and the female PWS in Cameroon. By focusing on children, we are working to prepare for the international year for children who stutter (2004).
In October 2002, we had a visit from a speech therapist
from the Fluency Trust of the UK who specializes in
working with children who stutter. Clare Thomas visited us and participated in all the
activities we had programmed to mark the International
Stuttering Awareness Day ISAD 2002. After the ISAD
activities, Clare did a training course for 24
teachers and parents of stammering pupils and other
interested members from SCAC in three different
localities in Cameroon. After these training courses,
those who attended the training have often been
solicited by officials of the Ministry of National
Education to give a series of talks and lectures
during the teachers' pedagogic seminars that were held
in many different localities of Cameroon on how
teachers and other school officials can help PWS
We produced and shared photocopies of leaflets
we had got from the British Stammering Association,
the National Stuttering Association, Stuttering
Foundation of America, ISTAR, Speak Easy and CAPS of
Canada. All these leaflets contained useful guides
that can help teachers and parents of PWS. The feedback from these handouts has all been very favorable.
Several teachers and parents of PWS who had not got
these leaflets and had learned of them contacted us to
ask for copies. A total of 875 leaflets have
been distributed.
Another great project we launched here geared at
helping stammering children was the 'TEASING AND
BULLYING TAB: UNACCEPTABLE BEHAVIOUR' project. With
the help of the material we got from the INSTITUTE FOR
STUTTERING TREATMENT AND RESEARCH of Alberta, Canada we
used their TAB publication and the STUTTERING HURTS
-- WE CAN HELP posters to organize seminars for teachers
of PWS and other school officials to organize a series
of seminars in different localities in Cameroon. Many
of the participants at these seminars learned a lot of
things on how to handle teasing which is common with
PWS in their schools. The feedback from this has
also been very favorable and we distributed more than
150 posters and leaflets on how to deal with teasing
and bullying.
We also concentrated on girls and women who stutter
here in Cameroon who are often in the minority as
compared to their men who stutter. Since they are
often in the minority they feel ashamed of joining our
self help movement. Learning from the experience of
famous women PWS who openly admit their situation and
have been doing a lot in the field of stuttering both
in their countries and in the international scene, and
learning from the experience of the international
support group called Girls and Women Living with
Stuttering, a similar group was set up within SCAC co-chaired by Nicole Tatah and Bronhilda Lukong. They got
some articles written by famous women PWS published in
several magazines and put them at the disposal of
other female PWS here: An inaugural meeting of the
Cameroon group of girls and women living with
stuttering held on the 27th of April 2003 and was
very well attended by women who stutter.
In order to enable many PWS to be computer literate
so as to have access to the valuable information on
stuttering available on the Internet, we
organized a series of computer learning classes for
our members. This was made possible with the help of
a lap top computer generously donated to us by Mrs. Elisabeth Versteegh
Vermeij, a retired speech therapist and our friends
from the Netherlands stuttering association
Demonthese. Many of our
members are able to do some elementary work on the
computer and have been able to be in touch with many
other PWS over the world through the medium of the
electronic mail. Many members of SCAC have joined the
E friend list of the BSA and are able to talk and
share experiences with many other PWS from many parts
of the world. Other email support groups that some of
our members have joined are: Indian Stuttering group,
Christians stutterers group, Girls and Women Living
with Stuttering, etc. Thanks to our computer
literacy classes, about 121 members of SCAC have email
addresses and are able to receive and send out
information using electronic mail.
The research project we had with the National
Institutes of the Health the NIH in Washington DC
spearheaded by Dr. Denis Drayna with the support of
Jane Fraser of the SFA, aimed at investigating the
genetic causes of stuttering, continued last year. Dr
Drayna visited us here in Cameroon twice and studied
about some 60 members of SCAC. The research project
will continue this year involving 100
members of SCAC. At the invitation of the Dr. Drayna
of the NIH, Joseph Lukong visited the WARREN GRANT
MAGUSON CLINICAL CENTER of that Institution for a
neurological examination related to the inherited
causes of stuttering in July this year. Also, many
members of SCAC have taken part in a research project on brain research
conducted by Anne Foundas, of Tulane University Health Center . The SFA has sent out
many copies of research project survey to us here
in Cameroon. Hopefully this year, we shall have some
data collected from Cameroon here on the framework of
the INTERNATIONAL PROJECT ON ATTITUDES TOWARDS
STUTTERING IPATS. The Coordinator of that project
Professor Kenneth O. St. Louis has been in touch with
our association in view of collecting some data from
here.
In July and August this year, two members of our
association took part in the SUCCESSFUL STUTTERING
MANAGEMENT PROJECT, the SSMP at the University of UTAH
in the Salt Lake City in the US. In summer of 2004,
Professors Bretenfeldt and Gurrister who are
responsible for this program, will come to Cameroon
and set up an SSMP program that will focus on
treating stutterers and training clinicians. This
project will go a long way to fill the vacuum that has
existed here in Cameroon as far as the provision of
health care to stutterers is concerned.