Medsy 

  • Echo earpeice to help stammers

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  • Cured by a hearing aid

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Medsy is the European distributor for a revolutionary 
anti-stammering device, called SpeechEasy™. The device sits 
out of sight in the ear and combines altered auditory feedback and delayed auditory feedback to create a ‘choral’ effect where the stammerer hears their voice at a slight pitch and time delay. This fools the wearer into thinking that someone is speaking in unison with them. Since its launch in the US in 2001, it has been proven to work with 80% of users.

Medsy won the contract to distribute the device throughout Europe and subsequently achieved presence within the Netherlands, France, Germany and the UK during 2007 through appointing various speech therapists and hospital-based specialists within each country to supply the device. Medsy 
has seven centres in the UK.

  • To create national awareness of the SpeechEasy™ device to achieve public recognition
  • To raise local awareness within the seven regions where SpeechEasy™ is available
  • To generate sales enquiries

Stammering is the breakdown of coordination of all the processes required for speech. The characteristics vary from person to person, with the most common characteristics being repetition, prolongation and blocking of words. One percent of the total population have a stammer, and over one third of young children have a serious stammer which requires extensive forms of speech therapy.

For the purposes of the PR campaign, it is important to create the market by raising national and local awareness with the general public and the medical community.

The strategy was two-fold, firstly, to raise national 
awareness through use of a successful case study and 
secondly, to launch within the Greater Manchester area 
using a clinical spokesperson from the locally reputed 
private BMI The Alexandra Hospital.

Eleven year old Natalie Riley from Blackburn agreed to take part as both the national and local case study, having been fitted with the device at BMI The Alexandra Hospital last September and having achieved fantastic results. Following an interview with both Natalie Riley and her mother, Lindsey, a case study was drafted and a press release written about the availability 
of the device in the Manchester area.

A media event was set for 18th March 2008 at BMI The Alexandra Hospital to draw both national and regional interest. As the device makes for a very visual story, we secured broadcast TV coverage with Sky News, who did a live broadcast from the hospital, ITV Granada and Channel M who all covered the event. National news including BBC Interactive, The Daily Mail and The Evening Standard also covered the story, as well as local newspapers including The Lancashire Telegraph and the Manchester Evening News.

Following this media event, we coordinated an event at 
The University of Manchester inviting stammerers within the locality and at the University to attend for a free trial. This event helped to generate direct sales leads for the SpeechEasy™ device.

The three-month campaign from January to March 2008, 
with a limited PR budget, helped to raise local and national awareness of the SpeechEasy™ device and build a good reputation for BMI The Alexandra Hospital as an innovator. 
The press campaign has reached over 6.5 million people 
within the UK.