PFNCA Parkinson’s Pointers: How Parkinson’s Affects Your Ability to Communicate
The Kensington Falls Church is proud to partner with the Parkinson Foundation of the National Capital Area! We will host a session titled“How Parkinson’s Affects Your Ability to Communicate” with Dr. Justin Martello on March 22nd. Refreshments will be served for this session, where Dr. Martello will be live-streamed to our community.
Parkinson’s disease can affect your ability to communicate in multiple ways, but is not always the same for everyone, and not always a guarantee that it will happen in a specific way. Learn the ways it may influence your ability to communicate and some ways we can work on improving that symptom with your treatment team.
For questions, please email Kayla Hulbert, Outreach & Events Coordinator, at khulbert@kensingtonsl.com.
- Sub-Headline With Dr. Justin Martello, Chief of Neurology at Medstar Baltimore Hospital
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Dr. Justin MartelloJustin P. Martello, M.D., FAAN is a board-certified neurologist specializing in movement disorders and Parkinson’s Disease and is the Chief of Neurology for MedStar Health System Baltimore hospitals (Franklin Square, Union Memorial, Harbor, and Good Samaritan). Dr. Martello earned his medical degree from the University of Maryland, Baltimore.
He completed his neurology residency as well as his fellowship in movement disorders at University of Maryland Medical Center. This comes after earning his bachelor’s degree with honors in biology from The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., where he was a research team member at Johns Hopkins/Kennedy Krieger Institute. -
Dr. Justin Martello, NeurologistLearn MoreJustin P. Martello, M.D., FAAN is a board-certified neurologist specializing in movement disorders and Parkinson’s Disease and is the Chief of Neurology for MedStar Health System Baltimore hospitals (Franklin Square, Union Memorial, Harbor, and Good Samaritan). Dr. Martello earned his medical degree from the University of Maryland, Baltimore.
He completed his neurology residency as well as his fellowship in movement disorders at University of Maryland Medical Center. This comes after earning his bachelor’s degree with honors in biology from The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., where he was a research team member at Johns Hopkins/Kennedy Krieger Institute.