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Former NBA player rallies behind NJ bill to cover stuttering treatments
Former NBA player rallies behind NJ bill to cover stuttering treatments

Yahoo

time17-04-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Former NBA player rallies behind NJ bill to cover stuttering treatments

TRENTON, N.J. – His voice resonated with New Jersey lawmakers, and Michael Kidd-Gilchrist testified for a bill designed to help people like him who stutter. The former NBA player from New Jersey was joined by two children, Benji and Ari, who also stutter, in making their voices heard. More Local News 'I have been judged a lot as an athlete and also as a person,' Kidd-Gilchrist testified to lawmakers. 'For us who stutter, as an adult and as kids, at times, it's very, very hard and challenging for us to be understood.' If passed into law, the bill would require health insurers and State Medicaid to provide coverage for medical expenses for treating stuttering, which includes rehabilitative speech therapy, whether in-person or virtual. 'I do see it as a human thing, you know?' said Kidd-Gilchrist. 'It's not an 'R' thing, it's not a 'D' thing.' While Kidd-Gilchrist's testimony echoed through the halls of the State House, his advocacy has spanned far beyond the walls in Trenton; the longtime Charlotte Bobcats/Hornets player had his voice heard in the Capitols of Pennsylvania, where he was born, and in Kentucky, where he went to college. 'Speech therapy exists, yes people can pay for this. There is also a really large cost associated with that,' said the bill's primary sponsor, Assemblywoman Alixon Collazos-Gill (D-NJ 27th District) .'That's also one of the hurdles – that even if we know that those therapies exist, the financial hurdle is pretty significant.' The bill advanced through the Assembly Financial Institutions and Insurance, or AFI, Committee last Thursday. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Ex-NBA star Michael Kidd-Gilchrist getting the word out about stuttering
Ex-NBA star Michael Kidd-Gilchrist getting the word out about stuttering

Fox News

time21-02-2025

  • Sport
  • Fox News

Ex-NBA star Michael Kidd-Gilchrist getting the word out about stuttering

Michael Kidd-Gilchrist was no slouch as a professional basketball player. The 6-foot-6 forward starred at St. Patrick in Elizabeth, New Jersey, before he committed to Kentucky, where he helped lead the Wildcats to a national championship in 2012. He was the No. 2 overall pick in the draft later that year by the Charlotte Bobcats and made the NBA All-Rookie Team in his first season in the NBA. He played for the Bobcats, which later became the Charlotte Hornets, until about midway through the 2019-20 season, when he was traded to the Dallas Mavericks. He stepped away from the professional ranks after playing in 2020 after he was waived by the New York Knicks. In all, Kidd-Gilchrist averaged 8.4 points and 5.4 rebounds per game in 466 career games. What few people knew during the highs and lows of his basketball career was that Kidd-Gilchrist battled through an issue that affects more than 3 million Americans and more than 80 million people globally. He suffered from stuttering. Stuttering is one of the toughest issues to talk about because it usually creates a false perception about the person who suffers from it – even getting out your name when ordering a coffee at Starbucks meeting knew people can be as difficult as putting together a math equation, not to mention the loneliness a person may feel failing to do something that appears to be very simple. "I always had a stutter. I had an (Individualized Education Program) around it in school. I had felt that I was always the outsider in the school system at times," he told Fox News Digital in a recent interview. "But it didn't really pick up as far as my insecurities around it until I was in eighth grade and high school. That's where, obviously, I was known for playing basketball." Kidd-Gilchrist said as his popularity grew on the floor, it off the floor. The requests for him to be interviewed and to be able to speak on the spot increased. He said it was "tough" to handle. "I've been fortunate to have the family that I have. But as far as a person who would stutter, it'd been only me. It'd been only me from school to college to the pros," he said. "I knew that in a moment in time I would not only advocate for myself but for my family." Kidd-Gilchrist turned his personal strife into a long-term vision for change. He founded Change & Impact Inc. to help those who stutter receive better healthcare and more access and resources help make a difference, along with raising awareness about stuttering and dispelling myths around it. Some of the myths include that those who stutter are nervous, unintelligent, stressed out or that stuttering can be "caught" through imitation or hearing someone else stutter or that an easy fix is to just take a breath. As Kidd-Gilchrist and others know, that is far from the case. "I think for a lot of people that don't know about stuttering, they think people are dumb or unintelligent, or we're ignorant, or rude, but that's not the case for us," he explained. "We just stutter. So, we just have to take our time with certain words. I hope to be among the people that are advocates for not only those who stutter but for those that aspire to be themselves. "I'm not perfect but I think a lot people have thought of me as being perfect due to what I did as an athlete. I hope people take note of what I'm doing and just aspire to be themselves." The idea for Change & Impact was conceived out of the NBA COVID bubble, when players were forced to isolate as the league restarted the 2019-20 season in Orlando, Florida. Kidd-Gilchrist said he thought about how he wanted to make a change in the world and what he could do as teammates and colleagues around him had advocated for charitable causes. "I'm just sitting in my room, and I'm like, man, I had so many bad experiences as far as me trying to relay a message either in school as a kid, or in high school or in college where I was embarrassed," he explained. "But then, it was a time where people had a little bit more empathy toward everything and anything. I took note of that and I wanted to stop playing." He said he thought it was finally time to be himself and "not run anymore." On top of that, he had a family and wanted to be around more day-to-day. Since then, Kidd-Gilchrist has personally worked with state lawmakers in Kentucky and Pennsylvania to pass bills that require health insurance coverage for speech therapy for those who stutter. Govs. Andy Beshear and Josh Shapiro both signed bills into law over the last year. "I'm honored to have been the sponsor of Senate Bill 111, and I'm glad that Kentucky gets to be first of the states in the country where Michael is going to bring this important work and this important change," Then-Republican Kentucky state Sen. Whitney Westerfield said in April. "Michael, thank you for your advocacy. Using your story and your platform to do good for others is what we are all called to do." Kidd-Gilchrist said he is working with lawmakers in several other states to get similar legislation passed, including New Jersey, New York, Tennessee, Illinois, Massachusetts and Nevada. The organization has said that access to speech therapy for children can improve their chances of recovery. Most children start stuttering between the ages of 2 and 5 years old and that stuttering has proven to be genetically based. For those who do battle with the issue, he offered some words of hope. "Every kid has their own deal with how they deal with a stutter," he said. "But I will say, lean on those you know mean well and know that there are better days ahead and seek friendship." Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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