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Showing posts with label Hearing aid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hearing aid. Show all posts

Saturday, November 8, 2025

Why Your Expensive Hearing Aids Aren't Enough!


Many people struggle to understand conversations even with expensive *modern hearing aids* because clinics skip crucial fitting steps. Retraining your *brain and hearing**, not just using a device, is key to **speech understanding* in noisy environments. Discover *better hearing* through comprehensive *hearing care* that addresses more than just amplification.

 In this video, Dr. Layne Garrett of *Timpanogos Hearing & Tinnitus* explains why hearing aids alone aren’t enough to fix your hearing in noisy places—and how a simple brain-training approach can finally make speech clear again.

 You’ll learn: 

 Why hearing happens in the brain, not just the ears What most hearing clinics get wrong about speech-in-noise How untreated hearing loss impacts your brain’s ability to process sound What a 15-minute daily auditory training program can do for your listening skills How to start retraining your brain today

 🧠 *Hearing is more than volume—it’s understanding.* Let’s fix that missing piece. 

 🌎 Visit our Website at: https://thebesthearing.com 💬 *Comment Below:*

 Where do you struggle most—restaurants, phone calls, or group conversations? 🔔 Subscribe for weekly hearing health tips, brain-hearing tools, and tinnitus education.



More older adults have turned to cochlear implants after Medicare expanded eligibility for the devices.

Kitty Grutzmacher had contended with poor hearing for a decade, but the problem had worsened over the past year. Even with her hearing aids, “there was little or no sound,” she said.

“I was avoiding going out in groups. I stopped playing cards, stopped going to Bible study, even going to church.”

Her audiologist was unable to offer Ms. Grutzmacher, a retired nurse in Elgin, Ill., a solution. But she found her way to the cochlear implant program at Northwestern Medicine.

There, Krystine Mullins, an audiologist who assesses patients’ hearing and counsels them about their options, explained that surgically implanting this electronic device usually substantially improved a patient’s ability to understand speech.


Kitty Grutzmacher had contended with poor hearing for a decade, but the problem had worsened over the past year. Even with her hearing aids, “there was little or no sound,” she said.

“I was avoiding going out in groups. I stopped playing cards, stopped going to Bible study, even going to church.”

Her audiologist was unable to offer Ms. Grutzmacher, a retired nurse in Elgin, Ill., a solution. But she found her way to the cochlear implant program at Northwestern Medicine.

There, Krystine Mullins, an audiologist who assesses patients’ hearing and counsels them about their options, explained that surgically implanting this electronic device usually substantially improved a patient’s ability to understand speech.


At Northwestern, Dr. Mullins tells older prospective patients that one year after activation, a 60 to 70 percent AzBio score — correctly repeating 60 to 70 words out of 100 — is typical.

recent Johns Hopkins study of about 1,100 adults found that after implantation, patients 65 and older could correctly identify about 50 additional words (out of 100) on the AzBio test, an increase comparable to younger cohorts’ results.

Participants over 80 showed roughly as much improvement as those in their late 60s and 70s.

“They transition from having a hard time following a conversation to being able to participate,” said Dr. Della Santina, an author of the study. “Decade by decade, cochlear implant results have gotten better and better.”

Moreover, an analysis of 70 older patients’ experiences at 13 implantation centers, for which Dr. Wick was the lead author, found not only “clinically important” hearing improvements but also higher quality-of-life ratings.

Scores on a standard cognitive test climbed, too: After six months of using a cochlear implant, 54 percent of participants had a passing score, compared with 36 percent presurgery. Studies that focus on 80 and 90-year-olds have shown that those with mild cognitive impairment also benefit from implants.


Nevertheless, “we’re cautious not to overpromise,” Dr. Wick said. Usually, the longer that older patients have had significant hearing loss, the harder they must work to regain their hearing and the less improvement they may see.

A minority of patients feel dizzy or nauseated after surgery, though most recover quickly. Some struggle with the technology, including phone apps that adjust the sound. Implants are less effective in noisy settings like crowded restaurants, and since they are designed to clarify speech, music may not sound great.

For those at the upper end of Medicare eligibility who already understand roughly half of the speech they hear, implantation may not seem worth the effort. “Just because someone is eligible doesn’t mean it’s in their best interests,” Dr. Wick said.

For Ms. Grutzmacher, though, the choice seemed clear. Her initial testing found that even with hearing aids, she understood only 4 percent of words on the AzBio. Two weeks after Dr. Mullins turned on the cochlear implant, Ms. Grutzmacher could understand 46 percent using a hearing aid in her other ear.

She reported that after a few rough days, her ability to talk by phone had improved, and instead of turning the television volume up to 80, “I can hear it at 20,” she said.


So she was making plans. “This week, I’m going out to lunch with a friend,” she said. “I’m going to play cards with a small group of women. I have a luncheon at church on Saturday.”

The New Old Age is produced through a partnership with KFF Health News

A version of this article appears in print on Oct. 21, 2025, Section D, Page 3 of the New York edition with the headline: When Dialing Up the Hearing Aid Isn’t EnoughOrder Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe




Saturday, June 7, 2025

Breaking the sound barrier: How to stay sociable despite hearing loss

 

 


The vestibular system, located in the inner ear, is responsible for maintaining balance, stability and spatial orentatation - dpa

So you find it increasingly difficult to follow conversations amid the clattering dishes and loud voices in a restaurant, and then afterwards you feel exhausted? If this sounds familiar, hearing loss could be on the horizon. Christin Klose/dpa© DPA International

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To be a good listener, you've got to be interested in what the speaker is saying. And you need to hear well. If your sense of hearing is weakening, you're likely to first notice it during conversations. Why?

"Because sometimes the speaker will use slight nuances of speech, their tone of voice, or minimally raise or lower their voice, to give what they're saying a particular meaning," says audiologist Eberhard Schmidt.

If you don't pick up these nuances and overtones, you won't know, for example, whether the speaker expects an immediate reaction from you or wants to complete their train of thought first.

Having to concentrate hard when you're listening to someone may be a sign of hearing loss. In some cases, listening can become so strenuous that it tires you out as the day goes on, doctors say. Another possible sign is waning attentiveness during conversations.

Listening is even more strenuous in a noisy environment: music playing, dishes clattering, other conversations nearby. This requires the ability to selectively focus on the conversation you're having, known as the "cocktail party effect." To have it, you need good hearing in both ears.

Your ears work closely together with your brain to filter the voice of your interlocutor out of multiple other sources of sound. "The sound waves that enter both ears are 'translated' into information and classified," Schmidt says.

If you're hard of hearing, your selective attention is impaired. The words of your interlocutor are then largely drowned out by background noise, sentences getting through only in fragments or muffled, explains Schmidt.

There are other signs of possible hearing loss, including constant ringing or buzzing in the ears - known as tinnitus - dizziness, impaired balance and headaches. Another is often being asked to turn down the volume of the TV or radio.

While no one likes to admit trouble hearing - for many a source of embarrassment or shame - a gradual decline in the functioning of the tiny hairs in the inner ear that turn sound waves into electrical signals, and the auditory nerve that transmits them to the brain, is a normal part of ageing.

Reluctant though you may be, you should get a hearing test from an ENT specialist or audiologist if you have hearing problems. Left untreated, hearing loss can lead to social withdrawal and is also linked to increased risk of falling - the vestibular system, responsible for balance, is located in the inner ear.

For mild hearing loss, a hearing aid is often unnecessary. Minor lifestyle adjustments can help to manage it, a very common one being to sit in a front row at speaking events (but not at loud events such as rock concerts!).

"If you sit way in back at church, for instance, you'll experience the reverberations especially strongly, which makes listening and understanding much more difficult," remarks Schmidt, also president of Germany's Federal Guild of Hearing Aid Professionals (biha).

In cases of moderate to severe hearing loss, however, a hearing aid is advisable. "It will detect and suppress disruptive sounds during conversations, enabling you to understand them," Schmidt says. "When it recognizes speech, it automatically turns down background noise."

New hearing aid wearers shouldn't expect things to sound as before though, since your auditory system and brain have to get used to the device. So experts will generally recommend wearing it in fairly quiet environments first, and only later where there's more background noise - say, from a TV or radio - and when you're on the phone.- dpa