Hearing Aids Allow People to Hear What They Have Been Missing, Sounds, Voices
By Kolleen on Feb 21, 2010 in Articles, Health, Retail, Shopping, Society
Unlike a hearing aid, a cochlear implant is a device which is surgically installed in the inner ear and bypasses the damaged parts of the auditory system to directly stimulate the hearing nerve. This allows a severely hearing impaired or deaf person to receive sounds. Hearing aids make sounds louder, which in some cases is a good thing. People who have lost their hearing at a later age in life are better candidates for hearing aids and younger individuals such as children are more likely to do well with a cochlear implant.
As many as 59,000 people worldwide have cochlear implants according to the National Institute of Health and approximately half of them are part of the pediatric population. The number of hearing impaired and deaf individuals around the world, who may use hearing aids, is harder to put a number on.
According to the Better Hearing Institute (BHI), the latest research, published in July 2005, put the number of hearing impaired or deaf individuals at roughly 31.5 million Americans. They break it down as follows – one in six baby boomers (ages 41-59) or about 14.6 percent have a hearing problem and most of these people are still members of the workforce. One in 14 ‘Generation Xers’ (ages 29-40) or 7.4 percent are already experiencing a hearing problem and at least 1.4 million children (ages 18 and younger) are having hearing problems.
It is not the hearing aid prices that keep people from wearing hearing aid devices; it’s the inconvenience and the simple fact that many people are vain. They don’t mind wearing eyeglasses when they know the glasses will help them to see better in addition to enhancing their look; however, people who get a hearing aid think it makes them look older or feeble and this is why people who need hearing aids are against them.
Hearing aids give people the opportunity to hear a lot of what they have been missing; birds, dogs, the difference in people’s voices and the list goes on and on.











