Hearing Tips

A Short Biography of Raymond Carhart, the “Father of Audiology”

Many people are surprised to discover how young the discipline of audiology really is, and just how recently its founding father founded the profession. To put this in perspective, if you wished to find the founding father of biology, for instance, you’d have to go back in time by 2,300 years and read through the

Questions to Ask Your Hearing Specialist Before You Buy Hearing Aids

When it’s time to buy a car, most of us know exactly what to do. We do some research, compare options, and compose a list of questions to ask the dealership. We work on this so that by the time we’re set to stop by the dealership, we have an idea of what we’re looking

The Digital Advantage Analog Vs Digital Hearing Aids

You’ve probably heard that today’s hearing aids are “not your grandfather’s hearing aids,” or that hearing aid technology is light-years ahead of where it used to be, even as recently as 5 to 10 years ago. But what makes modern technology so much better? And what exactly can modern day hearing aids accomplish that couldn’t

The Top 5 Hearing Aid Myths Exposed

At times, it seems as if we prefer to mislead ourselves. Wikipedia has an entry titled “List of common misconceptions” that contains hundreds of widely-held but false beliefs. Yes, I know it’s Wikipedia, but take a look at the bottom of the web page and you’ll see around 385 credible sources cited. For example, did

How to Read Your Audiogram at Your Hearing Test

You have just concluded your hearing test. The hearing specialist is now entering the room and provides you with a graph, like the one above, except that it has all of these signs, colors, and lines. This is supposed to demonstrate to you the exact, mathematically precise attributes of your hearing loss, but to you

How to Persuade Someone to Get a Hearing Test

We don’t need to tell you the signs of hearing loss; you already know them all too well. You have a completely different type of challenge: persuading someone you care about to get their hearing assessed and treated. But how are you expected to get through to someone who denies there is even a problem,

5 Reasons Why People Deny Hearing Loss

It takes the average person with hearing loss 5 to 7 years before getting a professional diagnosis, notwithstanding the fact that the warning signs of hearing loss are obvious to others. But are those with hearing loss just too stubborn to get help? No, actually, and for a few different reasons. Maybe you know someone

What to Expect at Your Hearing Exam

If the unknown provokes anxiety, then a visit to the hearing specialist is especially nerve-racking. While nearly all of us have experience with the family doctor and the neighborhood dentist, the trip to the hearing specialist could be a first. It sure would be useful to have someone elaborate on the process ahead of time,

Exploring a Career in the Hearing Care Profession

Although most of us remain up to date with our annual physical, dental cleaning, and eye examination, we generally forget to give consideration to the well-being of our hearing. And when our hearing does start to worsen, it appears so slowly and gradually that we scarcely notice and neglect to take action. It’s this lack

Avoiding the Biggest Mistake in Treating Your Hearing Loss

Do you recall the Q-Ray Bracelets? You know, the magnetic bracelets that vowed to provide instantaneous and significant pain relief from arthritis and other chronic conditions? Well, you won’t find much of that advertising anymore; in 2008, the producers of the Q-Ray Bracelets were legally required to reimburse customers a maximum of $87 million thanks

8 Reasons Hearing Loss is More Dangerous Than You Think

Hearing impairment is treacherously sneaky. It creeps up on a person through the years so slowly you hardly notice, making it all too easy to deny it’s even there. And then, when you at last recognize the symptoms, you shrug it off as troublesome and irritating as its true consequences are hidden. For about 48

Professional musicians at greater risk of developing hearing loss

Popularity, wealth, and screaming fans — these are a few of the terms and phrases you’d include to describe the lifestyle of a professional musician. In spite of this, what you probably wouldn’t consider is “hearing loss” or “tinnitus,” the not-so-pleasant side-effects of all that fame, wealth, and screaming. The sad paradox is, a musician’s