About Me
With a graduate degree in communication sciences and disorders from Boston University, Glenn Bunting has nearly 40 years of clinical experience in evaluating and treating patients with a wide variety of voice disorders. He completed his clinical fellowship at Boston University Medical Center, where he worked for several years before joining the Department of Neurology at Lahey Clinic and later, Mass. Eye and Ear.
He was one of the founding clinicians of the Voice and Speech Laboratory at Mass. Eye and Ear in 1992, and has since guided the clinically specialized program to national recognition in the evaluation and treatment of patients with voice disorders. He specializes in the treatment of laryngeal muscle tension focusing on laryngeal manipulation and cognitive behavioral voice therapy.
In addition to his clinical duties, Mr. Bunting has taught graduate level courses in voice disorders, neuromotor speech disorders, and laryngectomy rehabilitation at Boston University, Emerson College, and the MGH Institute of Health Professions. He was a member of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association Voice Disorders steering committee for three years, during which time he co-authored several national clinical guideline documents related to endoscopic procedures and head and neck rehabilitation.
Mr. Bunting has written several book chapters and co-authored numerous articles related to voice disorders. He continues to lecture nationally and internationally on a variety of topics, including the evaluation and treatment of voice disorders related to head and neck cancer, laryngeal muscle tension, and functional etiologies.