I am an animator but I am very dark/arty
To realise a few very cool ideas to raise awareness?
So did you guys do some artwork to raise tinnitus awareness? I would really like to see it.![]()
What happened?
It can indeed be difficult to "get things done" in this world - there is always "something" that stalls the process: lack of commitment, lack of money, group unity, or lack of self-leadership, or some other factor (external or internal).@Onnie's partner is working on something and others are either not skilled enough or can't do it for free
It can indeed be difficult to "get things done" in this world - there is always "something" that stalls the process: lack of commitment, lack of money, group unity, or lack of self-leadership, or some other factor (external or internal).
But you don't always need to choose the most difficult path (i.e. getting hold of an animator to create an awareness message). Take a look at the campaign below (which has just finished). It used a simple "Shutterstock" purchased image with a 10-sentence campaign message that was linked to the URL of the Frontiers Research Topic concerning tinnitus. In addition, it had just the budget of a 4-person meal at McDonalds and yet it managed to reach almost 12,000 people - I kid you not. You see, I happen to know the person who was behind the campaign. Pretty smart guy too, I have to say: he knows a lot about tinnitus, social media marketing, and seems to have a lot of contacts. A bit like me, I guess. In addition, I am told he did it all free-of-charge. What a nice guy, right?
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Agreed. That's probably why that smart guy behind the campaign decided to do his own thing.But.... we've both seen the reality so no point of wasting our breath!
Agreed. That's probably why that smart guy behind the campaign decided to do his own thing.
You know... during the long, long period where I have devoted time and energy to advocacy, I have - as you can imagine - come across a large number of people: CEOs of pharma companies, top level researchers, non-profit organizations and of course tinnitus sufferers. And... during that long period of time, I have heard more than once people utter words to the effect of: tinnitus will not be cured until enough people develop it.Yes good result but overall we are still more or less stuck.
The only chance of moving forward in big steps would be if you become a CEO of an organisation like ATA!
Until then we will be going in circles relying on an individual effort to spread the word!
I wouldn't worry too much about advocacy - see this reason:We could always send our clip to ATA and BTA?
tinnitus will not be cured until enough people develop it.
What about people talking about their T, what its effect is on their lives. Do you think anyone on here would be interested in that?
How do we reach a big audience though? Also went to my ATM and on the screen several charities appeared, i.e. you could donate before withdrawing cash - even the dog trust was on there, now...got me thinking Tinnitus charities are even less known the animal welfare ones...in fact there is only one in the UK, the BTA.
You know... during the long, long period where I have devoted time and energy to advocacy, I have - as you can imagine - come across a large number of people: CEOs of pharma companies, top level researchers, non-profit organizations and of course tinnitus sufferers. And... during that long period of time, I have heard more than once people utter words to the effect of: tinnitus will not be cured until enough people develop it.
And there is perhaps some truth to that. I happen to also know a fair bit about other diseases (and disease groups) - particularly those diseases where stem cells might have an application. And the same argument seems to hold: there is a lack of will (at all levels - doctors, health authorities, and the patients themselves) to do the right thing. The only topic (health-wise) that will ever get prioritized is when an epidemic threatens our existence e.g. Zika, Ebola, certain influenza strains (or some other "bug" out there).
Lastly, I can also mention that just in the last month or so, a number of both disclosed and non-disclosed developments have taken place at the pharma company level - which - collectively will have the ingredients to create the perfect storm and hence delay future treatments in relation to tinnitus. There is a real possibility that during the past, say, 6 months, the entire future pipeline of tinnitus drugs will have been delayed by, say, 5 to 7 (maybe even 10 years). Add to that the fact that the WHO estimates 1.1 billion young adults are at risk of developing hearing loss (due to recreational noise exposure) and you now have a new type of unstoppable "epidemic" - or "pandemic" as it is called when it affects the worldwide population. The tinnitus community is potentially in so much trouble, but, very few of you are aware of it - and that includes your local doctor down-the-block and also government health authorities (who have absolutely no clue about tinnitus research and, say, Kv-channel openers such as RL-81).
It is included (but if I recall correctly, they do not offer estimates on that i.e. tinnitus and future prevalence). But it is discussed. See attachment.Is tinnitus mentioned by WHO at all?
It is included (but if I recall correctly, they do not offer estimates on that i.e. tinnitus and future prevalence). But it is discussed. See attachment.
To be honest, I think Tzounopoulos has done his bit and then some. Somebody else needs to get "off their asses", if you ask me... There is just too much mediocrity in the world we live in: lack of willpower, lack of intelligence, lack of critical thinking. When you add those untasteful ingredients into a stew, the result is not something which you can sell very easily.But.... maybe and it's only maybe there's another option and that's if prof TT decides to get off his ass and do some proper work.