CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
The American Tinnitus Association and
The Roadmap to a Cure
James A.
Kaltenbach, PhD and David P. Fagerlie,
MSW
The first organization
in the world formed to address tinnitus
was the American Tinnitus Association
founded in 1971 by Charles Unice, MD.
Dr. Unice, a tinnitus sufferer, sought
to create an organization that would raise
money to fund research for a cure. He
soon called Jack Vernon, PhD, the one
tinnitus researcher in the world at the
time. Dr. Vernon explained he could not
offer Unice treatment for tinnitus as
none existed. Even so, three days later
Unice showed up at Vernon’s office
in Portland. During a walk that afternoon
while standing near a water fountain in
downtown Portland, Unice discovered he
could not hear his tinnitus. It was a
“Eureka!” moment for Vernon
who understood immediately what had happened.
The sound of the flowing water masked
Unice’s tinnitus, providing him
with welcome relief. “Obviously,
we can’t park Unice next to the
fountain for the rest of his life,”
Vernon thought. “But we might be
able to replicate the fountain’s
sound in some sort of wearable device.”
That’s how Vernon developed wearable
masking devices (see Chapter 10). Jack
Vernon became a co-founder of the American
Tinnitus Association and the driving force
behind funding tinnitus research at a
time when no other support existed.
Gloria Reich, PhD joined
the American Tinnitus Association in 1975
and later became its first Executive Director.
She and Vernon developed a tinnitus training
course for healthcare professionals and
brought it to communities throughout the
country. Although resources were limited,
in 1980, American Tinnitus Association
awarded its first research grant in the
amount of $12,000.
Though formed to be
a fundraising machine to support research,
in looking back, one could conclude that
the major contribution American Tinnitus
Association made in its first decade was
as source of comfort for those who were
suffering. So little was known. No established
protocols for treatment or therapeutic
devices existed. Tinnitus sufferers and
their loved ones feared that this condition
was a sign the affected person was going
crazy. American Tinnitus Association became
an association of individuals - the afflicted,
their families, and informed healthcare
professionals - sharing information, support
and encouragement.
In 1978, the syndicated
newspaper publication Parade ran an article
on tinnitus and the American Tinnitus
Association efforts to provide treatment
for it. Over 100,000 pieces of mail, many
with donations, arrived at the American
Tinnitus Association door over the next
few weeks. It took three full months for
the nascent staff to respond to the overflow
of mail. In 1983, the syndicated newspaper
column "Dear Abby" mentioned
tinnitus and referenced American Tinnitus
Association. The office received another
20,000 letters. Mentions in "Dear
Abby" and "Ann Landers"
columns in 1986 produced another 130,000
letters. Contributions from so much public
attention were the seed capital that moved
the association forward. American Tinnitus
Association’s reputation as the
center of tinnitus information expanded
throughout the USA and into other countries.
Today, American Tinnitus
Association remains the largest association
of individual contributors making grants
for tinnitus research. Similar associations
are now present in other countries, mostly
to provide support for those with tinnitus
(see Table 10-I at end of this chapter).
Today, tinnitus may
very well be the "malady" of
the 21st century. Early on, opportunities
for growth were not as straightforward
as they are today. These days tinnitus
is being openly discussed and media organizations
regularly report about it. American Tinnitus
Association has increased its momentum
toward educating community and government
leaders and inspiring greater philanthropy.
American Tinnitus Association has assumed
a leadership role to rid the world of
a scourge that is silent and unseen to
those unaffected but shreds quality of
life for a rapidly increasing number of
adults, youth, and children. We need American
Tinnitus Association and organizations
like it more than ever before.
American Tinnitus Association
was established specifically to raise
money for tinnitus research. Before 1925
only nineteen scientific papers about
tinnitus had been published. Progress
was slow. In the ten-year period between
1955 and 1964, fifty-two reports were
published. From 1965 to 1974 the number
increased dramatically to 472 published
works on tinnitus. When the American Tinnitus
Association made its first grant in 1980,
it was the first by any organization given
specifically for the study of tinnitus.
In the late 1990s,
it became clear that a general plan might
be needed to help find the cure. The American
Tinnitus Association again took a leadership
role by recognizing that many scientists
and clinicians were needed from different
disciplines, and so a roadmap to a cure
would be helpful.
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