Ask the Audiologist webinar
Hearing Loss Association on America, Michigan State Association (HLAA-MI) will be hosting a Zoom webinar panel discussion. The topic is "Ask the Audiologist". You will be able to get answers to your questions.
To participate, people have to first send an email to events@hearingloss-ggr.org to get the Zoom link. They'll then need to register.
Wednesday, Nov 18, from 6:30 PM until 8:00 PM.
Panelists:
Erica Mandrick of Michigan ENT and Allergy
Darcy Jaarsma of Spectrum Health Audiology
Michelle Rankin of Rankin Audiology & Hearing
Kim Kragt of Constance Brown Hearing Centers
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Hearing Loss Support Group.
@julieo4 Thank you Julie for your wide ranging perspective on HLAA's development. I took the liberty of sending your comments to the NYC board.
Great idea Barbb.... I know two others who might be willing to participate. They have Kaiser insurance also. I would love to have some ideas from you as to subjects to cover. I will think about this. I see my audiologist Friday and may discuss it with her. Thanks.... Judy
Hi Tony.... That is true and yes very frustrating. Take a look at Barb's suggestion that I and some others offer to go in and speak to the doctors. That makes more sense because we are the ones who deal with issues personally. I don't know why I was thinking that my audiologist and ENT doctor should train others when there is so much that they don't understand or think about themselves. Thanks for responding. Judy
@julieo4 I should have said "to" the HLAA NYC board.
I go back so far that I'm like a dinosaur with SHHH/HLAA. It's a wonderful organization, but it did not happen by osmosis. So many people gave a ton to make HLAA what it is today. I love them all!
Thank you barbb. It's evolutionary. We, who live with HL, know what we need IF we have learned that ourselves. So many have not. And, it's the hearing healthcare industry that has failed to teach us. I respect audiologists. I respect ENT medical professionals. However, I know, as you do, that unless you live with hearing loss yourself, it's very hard to understand how it affects a person. I'm in a discussion right now with a healthcare professional who has hearing loss herself. She is devastated by the way people at her work place treat her. She is unhappy and depressed. See's no answers. It's so hard to believe that the people she purchased hearing aids from (I don't know who they are), did not tell her about assistive technology. This goes on and on and on and on.
@julieo4, Interesting situation. There's one you could accomplish a lot with, if she can be open to it! I hope you can report on the progress (or lack of). With you last sentence, I'm not sure which "this" you are referring to!?
"This" lack of sharing information about options that come with hearing aids.
@julie04, This is a great story. I've read about some of this from my years as a member of HLAA. But you've lived it during its infancy. Thanks for sharing this and for all the years of dedication. If it wasn't for the work of this organization, people with hearing loss would most likely be at the mercy of their hearing care providers. We know that they do not have all the answers, and certainly not always the best solutions. It's exciting to be part of the support network.
Tony in Michigan.
To me, it's distressing and extremely disappointing to learn that the audis with degrees know so very little about how to enable us to hear better! I bought my aid from a lowly Costco tech--but she has taken the time and effort to actually LEARN about hearing and the disease that cause hearing loss as well as the latest things that can help. Imagine how disappointing it was to go to the CI hearing center two hours away and find that neither the two audis nor the surgeon knew even a tiny bit about Meniere's or relatively new speech-to-text apps! Since I was being evaluated for a CI, my first and most important question was if it would cancel out the recruitment and distortion which causes such grief to Menierians, but none of the three "experts" with degrees could reassure me. I asked for an appt. with the audi, in order to learn about new adaptive devices and tricks, but she hadn't even heard of Live Transcribe and dismissed all speech-to-text apps as needless! The gal at Costco has read a great deal about Meniere's and understands both recruitment and distortion. How did those two audis at the CI center get a degree without learning about those two very bothersome problems for many HOH?
Education is a general failure in this country: I'm a self-taught graphic designer/editor/photographer and have had several interns and newly graduated employees over the years. Not a single one of them could size a photo! Four years of expense, and they couldn't accomplish the most mundane task necessary to turn photos and text into an appealing layout! The daughter of a close friend lived with us for a year (she's in her 50s and owes lots of college loan debt) in order to get started in real estate in this small town. She graduated from a very expensive school, but until now she's never had any job other than clerical. I encouraged her to pursue her interest in real estate photography, and she's now supporting herself and in great demand, entirely self-taught, including operating a drone. All that expensive education never enabled her to have a job she liked that could support her...until now, 30 years after graduating. What's wrong with that picture?