Skip to content
CharitiesAidWelfare, Medical Health Aged Care

Valentino is asking his five-year-old friends to put on earmuffs to understand deafness

NextSense 2 mins read

 

  • 20 October kicks off Loud Shirt Day across Australia.
  • Australia’s major hearing loss charities combine their efforts to make Loud Shirt Day a big deal on the national fundraising calendar for deaf children.
  • It’s all about wearing your wackiest shirt to increase community awareness about hearing loss and raise critically important funds for kids with deafness – people can sign up today to take part and raise money right up until the end of the year.
  • Families who know firsthand how important early help is are getting involved.
  • For example, kids like 5-year-old Valentino in Penrith, who has been receiving hearing, speech and language services from leading provider NextSense, since he was born.
  • His mum, Jocelyn Bartuccio, has organised earmuffs for Valentino’s friends to wear with loud shirts on Friday 20th so they can experience a lack of sound - and understand how Valentino feels without his hearing aids.
  • “NextSense services have really worked for Valentino. He does not need a school specialising in hearing loss because of the efforts of everyone on his team - medical staff, speech therapists, audiologists, teachers of the deaf – the support for our family has been such a gift,” says Jocelyn.
  • “I am concerned there are families out there with a new baby with a hearing loss and are simply not aware first, how easy it is to get services, and second how critical it is to start therapy when their babies are just weeks old.
  • “That’s why we are fundraising for NextSense on 20 October. To help this life-changing organisation reach out to more children.”
  • You can help Valentino and Jocelyn raise funds by signing up to Loud Shirt Day
    just google NextSense Loud Shirt Day – or donate directly to NextSense at nextsense.org.au/donate

About Loud Shirt Day

Loud Shirt Day helps all children access life-changing support, including children who don’t have NDIS funding. NextSense and other hearing loss charities campaign to raise vital funds for children with hearing loss on Loud Shirt Day and raise awareness about the importance of acting early when children have hearing loss. NextSense depends on donations to fund support programs and essential equipment like baby playgroups and small group activities, specialised equipment, family and therapist workshops, community outreach so families needing help can find our services as early as possible, and to promote inclusion and understanding.

Ends


About us:

NextSense, formerly the Royal Institute for Deaf and Blind Children, is a 163-year-old not-for-profit organisation providing services to people who are deaf, hard of hearing, blind, or with low vision across Australia. We work with children, adults and their families to create individual programs of care or education that meets their unique needs. A registered NDIS provider we are committed to helping people with hearing and vision loss redefine what’s possible on their own terms. With the support of your generous donations, NextSense is a world leader in research and professional education in our field. We provide more cochlear implants than any other service in Australia.


Contact details:

For media enquiries, please contact:

Prudence Anderson, Communications
NextSense

M: 0404 821 935
E: pru1dence@gmail.com

Media

More from this category

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 18/10/2024
  • 10:22
Royal Australian College of GPs

‘Fantastic milestone’ for 88 new specialist GPs in South Australia

The Royal Australian College of GPs will welcome 88 new fellows as specialist GPs in South Australia at a ceremony on Saturday 19 October, which will also celebrate the state’s annual RACGP Award winners. The new GPs attending the event in Adelaide Town Hall will include eight rural generalists – GPs who’ve completed Additional Rural Skills Training in fields such as anaesthesia and obstetrics. Fellowship of the RACGP (FRACGP) reflects a doctor’s qualification and expertise as a specialist GP and is the culmination of around 11 years of education, training, rigorous assessment, and experience in primary care. RACGP President Dr…

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Science
  • 18/10/2024
  • 09:30
Centenary Institute

Revealing the role of immune cells in liver cancer

New research from the Centenary Institute and the University of Sydney has uncovered important insights into the immune environment within liver cancer, the sixth…

  • Contains:
  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 18/10/2024
  • 06:35
Royal Australian College of GPs

ACT Labor’s proposed walk-in centres expansion leaves cost and care questions unanswered: RACGP

The Royal Australian College of GPs (RACGP) has reiterated its call for the next ACT government to commit to an independent evaluation of the ACT nurse-led walk-in centres. With ACT Labor announcing an expansion of centres which are reportedly bleeding taxpayers’ money, ahead of this Saturday’s election, the RACGP also gave its assessment of parties’ primary care policies. An independent evaluation of the centres has been a core pillar of the RACGP’s ACT election platform since before a Canberra Times investigation revealed health officials had “buried” $10 million in expenses. Emails obtained under a Canberra Times freedom of information request…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.