Hearing Assistive Technology - What do you find helpful?

Posted by Julie, Volunteer Mentor @julieo4, Feb 8, 2022

There are many types of assistive technology that can make life with hearing loss easier. Often, people who could benefit are not aware of the technologies existence or availability. Hearing aids are #1, but what comes next? Are you familiar with hearing loops, FM systems, Infrared systems, streamers, hand held microphones, etc.? Please share what works for you.

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@rbailey7 Have you tried setting different Alert Tones for various alerts? The defaults are certainly not the best. For a smoke alarm, I went to Classic and then chose Anticipate. Seems to be the loudest to me and lasts for a relatively longer time than some of the others. I would imagine you could connect a speaker to the headphone jack, but I haven't tried it. When you've contacted Apple, do you get the person in ACCESSIBILITY? Reach out to them, I've have excellent experiences with them. Their number is 1-877-204-3930
Tony in Michigan

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Thank you for responding. I have talked to Apple Accessibility as well as Apple Support etc many times. Have also tried the many different Alert tones…liked night owl and constellation. I can hear well with hearing aids in but I don’t wear all of the time, especially during the night and it’s so important to be able to hear the alerts. I don’t understand why Apple has made the ringtone nice and loud but not the others. Have tried the Belkin stand/charger/speaker with iPhone which made them a little louder but need something more powerful in volume. As well, the alerts are showing in notifications on both devices even thru the night when all is quiet. Have to be patient with technology! But Thankyou!

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@tonyinmi

@rbailey7 Have you tried setting different Alert Tones for various alerts? The defaults are certainly not the best. For a smoke alarm, I went to Classic and then chose Anticipate. Seems to be the loudest to me and lasts for a relatively longer time than some of the others. I would imagine you could connect a speaker to the headphone jack, but I haven't tried it. When you've contacted Apple, do you get the person in ACCESSIBILITY? Reach out to them, I've have excellent experiences with them. Their number is 1-877-204-3930
Tony in Michigan

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Thank you for your input on this tonyinmi. If I'm in a different room than my iPhone is, I don't even know it's ringing, regardless of ringtone or sound. While I try to keep it close by that isn't always practical. Most people who call me leave messages as they know this.

It's important for people with hearing loss to know there are many alerting systems available that use other senses. Vibrations, light flashing, etc. This is especially important at night when we are not using our personal technology.

Diglo.com has a great catalog of devices. Most states have programs that provide this kind of device for the disability population. Worth looking into.

Assistive technology is a huge help. Besides cell phones, do any of you use these other devices?

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@maxxr

The problem with me is different. I have a total unilateral hearing loss since birth and no doctor has been able to come up with any solution yet. I want to ask that does the hearing aid act like a volume controller? Will it work for my total hearing loss in the left ear?

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I too have unilateral hearing loss. Deaf in my right ear (always unaided) since birth and near normal hearing in my left ear, until my 20's. Was fit with my first hearing aid for my left ear in my late 30's and then 40 hit with a more noticeable drop on the left. My audiologist suggested a Phonak bicros system.
Traditional hearing aids send sound into the ear they are sitting on. With a CROS set up, the device on the non-hearing ear looks like a traditional hearing aid. But “it is really a microphone and transmitter and is picking up the sound to send it to the hearing aid on the better side.
It is not a perfect system but it does allow me to have a little localization. Conversations with one or two people are much easier to participate in. Large group conversations are still a challenge. Listening to music in the car as the driver is the best thing ever! lol - when I am a passenger, I often take out the receiver in my right ear and just use the hearing aid in my left to cut out the road noise.
My current system is almost 7 years old. I am exploring brands now to see what new features are available.
Cochlear implants are now available for single sided deafness, but I have not done much research on this.
Lisa

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@lispenney

I too have unilateral hearing loss. Deaf in my right ear (always unaided) since birth and near normal hearing in my left ear, until my 20's. Was fit with my first hearing aid for my left ear in my late 30's and then 40 hit with a more noticeable drop on the left. My audiologist suggested a Phonak bicros system.
Traditional hearing aids send sound into the ear they are sitting on. With a CROS set up, the device on the non-hearing ear looks like a traditional hearing aid. But “it is really a microphone and transmitter and is picking up the sound to send it to the hearing aid on the better side.
It is not a perfect system but it does allow me to have a little localization. Conversations with one or two people are much easier to participate in. Large group conversations are still a challenge. Listening to music in the car as the driver is the best thing ever! lol - when I am a passenger, I often take out the receiver in my right ear and just use the hearing aid in my left to cut out the road noise.
My current system is almost 7 years old. I am exploring brands now to see what new features are available.
Cochlear implants are now available for single sided deafness, but I have not done much research on this.
Lisa

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Thank you for explaining the value of a bicross hearing aid. You mention that one ear is 'deaf' and also that the hearing in your left ear has deteriorated.

My hearing loss story mirrors yours a bit, but it started over 40 years ago so the technology was far less sophisticated. However, I was fit with a bicross system way back in the 1970s. Back then, it required a behind the head wire that attached the 2 units. No 'wireless stuff' then.

At that time I should have been convinced to have 2 hearing aids as both ears experienced moderate loss in testing. Over a few decades, because one ear was not getting sound like the other ear was, the unaided ear experienced 'auditory deprivation', something that can happen over time when an ear is not receiving or interpreting sound. By the time I tried a second hearing aid it did virtually nothing for me but amplify noise.

Years later, as I watched the development of cochlear implants, I was encouraged to consider getting a CI. I was fortunate that an audiologist friend I had met through HLAA convinced me to use the hearing aid that wasn't working with its telecoil technology plugged into a portable radio to try to reintroduce intelligible sound in that 'bad' ear. He said that I might be able to rehabilitate that 'bad' ear enough to make a CI work for me. I listened to a lot of audio tapes, children's books, etc. Slowly, that 'bad ear' started hearing more than it had for decades. Not perfect, but it was picking up some words.

When I decided to go the CI route, I asked the surgeons to implant that 'bad' ear. They would have preferred to do the better ear, but I won that battle. In 2005 I was implanted on the 'bad' ear side with the Freedom implant by Cochlear Americas. Within days after activation I was able to hear sounds I'd not heard for years. Within a few weeks, I was able to understand speech. Needless to say, the CI changed my life. The auditory nerve was able to get desired sound to my brain and my brain was able to interpret it. Yes, it took a bit of rehab. Today, I recognize sounds, voices, can listen to TV without captions (although I use them often), and am able to do well in noisy social settings when I use the add on technology that is available for my CI processor.

Having been told in my 20s that my auditory nerves were dying and that I'd be 'stone deaf' by the time I was 40, was absolutely wrong although it was probably 'right' then because cochlear implants were not on the radar yet.

A cochlear implant can reawaken your 'bad' ear as it did mine. If you have a CI evaluation, I encourage you to do it at a cochlear implant center.

Does your audiologist work with cochlear implants?

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