Showing posts with label hearing aids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hearing aids. Show all posts

Thursday, July 17, 2008

IFHOH Day Three, Part II


Day three-- part II

The first workshop we attended Friday was called Accessibility Awareness Collaboration and Hard-of-Hearing People given by Sami Virtanen from the Finnish Federation of Hard-of-Hearing People. Like the the real-time text workshop, I found it exceedingly difficult to pay attention. Tired of reading CART, and feeling full from the large lunch I nearly fell asleep. The late night, early morning routine was catching up with me. Virtanen spoke mainly about Finnish policies, especially with regard to required captioned television programming. The US has had that since 1990. I think the information presented was probably more useful to those in the political arena of policy change, because several representatives from HLAA, CHHA and various other HH/deaf organizations around the world stood up to comment.

I wanted to leave then, but Creating Consumer Awareness through Policy Change turned out to be a surprise. Sherri Collins was a firecracker from Arizona. After waking us all up by handing out prizes she detailed her personal hearing history, and drew a thought-provoking analogy between independence and accessibility. It was US Independence Day. I had forgotten.

Next, Sherri expanded on events leading up to a policy change requiring Arizona audiologists and hearing aid dispensers to provide information about the benefits of telecoils to consumers. Telecoils seemed to be a recurring theme at IFHOH.

Following her presentation, a few people commented they felt a law seemed unreasonably harsh. A man from Michigan spoke about how pressure had been placed on an airport to loop it without resorting to policy change. A woman from New Zealand detailed a sad story about an HH/deaf American tourist who was hit by a passenger train when he got off at the wrong stop after failing to hear an announcement. All NZ trains were looped for telecoil after that. Sadly, she said, it took a death to change policy.

One man remarked that telecoils should be called "accessibility coils" or a-coils since they were used for much, much more than the telephone. Discussion ensued about telecoil vs infrared and privacy concerns in courtrooms, federal buildings and other sensitive areas, since people with telecoils can sometimes hear outside looped rooms with the doors closed. Others protested that hearing aid manufacturers were making smaller, more attractive aids for the Baby-boom generation, dropping t-coil in the process. Two more concerns were voiced:

1) Policy to require telecoil induction loops in public buildings could become obsolete within a few years if hearing aid manufacturers stopped making hearing aids with telecoil capability.

2) Hearing aid manufacturers should be encouraged to include telecoil capability in their newer models because of the many, many benefits.

The final workshop of the day was Experience Working for and With Those With Meniere: A Non-Medical Perspective I attended this one mainly for my husband who was diagnosed with Menieres about six years ago. Dr. Henk de Graaf from the Netherlands reported on the results of a twenty-five year study of Menieres patients in his country. Then he led a discussion of alternative treatments for Meneires. One woman had some success with a chiropractic procedure where the feet were adjusted. Several people mentioned using vitamins, exercise, acupuncture, eating certain foods, not eating certain foods, reducing stress, yoga, marijuana-- you name it. Someone else mentioned the Meniett device. Hoping to discover something new I could share with my husband, I came away feeling deflated. No one knows of a cure.

That night Lorne went to a football game. In the mood for something ethnic, Kate, Ann and I sniffed our way up Davie Street, and found a little Mongolian Grill.


IFHOH Day Three, Part I
IFHOH Day Two
International Federation of Hard of Hearing Congress -- Part 1

Friday, August 24, 2007

Midieval Deaf



The Medieval Festival.


Ever since I went to the Medieval Festival last Saturday I have been thinking about how difficult it would have been to interact with anyone in a busy village without hearing aids. I'm not sure what social convention required of women other than domestic chores and child bearing. Loud community gatherings at a faire with the neighbors would have been challenging. Even today, with hearing aids, I tend to avoid busy activities that require talking to lots of people.

Of the events I attended last Saturday, the play was the most difficult to follow because the actors all wore wooden masks over their faces making it impossible to see their mouths move. All the entertainment took place outside, so no walls offered acoustical sound enhancement. Magic, musical and jousting performances were delivered without the benefit of microphone equipment or sound systems. Many of the males wore beards obsuring their mouths-- a problem for those of us who read lips. I couldn't hear or understand anything-- EVEN WITH HEARING AIDS. I had to ask my family constantly what was going on. During a musical performance the musicians invited the crowd to sit closer, so I went. I enjoyed the relaxing atmosphere of sitting near the musicians. I could hear the music better, especially the drum and bagpipes; And being closer I could read their lips while they sang. But it turned out the words to their songs were in Gaelic, so it didn't much matter. Then a story-teller told a tale in English about a stolen pork chop and some monks, and a miracle performed by the Virgin Mary. I heard maybe 1/3 of it with my hearing aids, and realized I would have been deaf to it all without. A magician performed some impressive trickery with scarves and rings, then we all went to the Inn for potage and mead-- the highlight of my visit back in time.


I have wondered how common hearing loss was in 1376. I've read the average lifespan during medieval times was about age thirty. Many of us who are late-deafened may not have survived the diseases or conditions that deafened us if we had been alive in the middle-ages. For example, my hearing loss was theoretically caused when the measles damaged my cochleas as a little girl, which supposedly started an early progressive hearing loss. Without the benefit of aspirin to bring my high temperature down, would I have died? Statistically, one in three people over age sixty-five develops hearing loss today, but if so few people lived to age sixty-five in the 1300s, I wonder how many people developed the relatively common hearing loss associated with aging? I don't know the answer to this question, but I am beginning to speculate that maybe hearing loss was rare. I just don't know.


Near-sightedness, on the other hand, is common in young people today, since the average onset is about age ten. I assume many people would have been near-sighted during the middle-ages too. I cannot imagine my life without glasses! They are so much better at correcting vision than hearing aids are at correcting hearing. Medieval women spent hours each day laboring over needle work. I would choose glasses over hearing aids if I could pick only one, as I feel the ability to see would have been more necessary for survival. With both a seeing and hearing problem, I don't know how effective or useful I could have been.

Yikes--it's a scary thought! No wonder they drank so much mead and ale!

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

My Top Five Hearing Aid Hate List


My Top Five Hearing Aid Hate List:

1. Noise distortion.
A) Over--amplification in frequency ranges where I don't need it.
B) Under-amplification in the frequency ranges where I need it.
C) Over-amplified noise drowning out the under-amplified sounds I need to hear.

2. Discomfort-
A) Too much stuff in, on, around the ears.
B) Plugged up feeling inside the ears.
C) Weight hanging over ears.
D) Soreness of molds where rubbing inside the ears.
E) Sweaty when hot.
F) Stickiness after wearing for awhile.

3. Whistling like a teapot at all the wrong times. (Is there ever a right time for that piercing squeal we all know as the dreaded "feedback"? Have any of you ever been sitting quietly in your book group trying to listen to the discussion when someone says, "What's that . . NOISE?" The room becomes deadly quiet as the others cock their ears like hunting Labradors. Then one of them points to you. "It's HER!" she yelps accusingly. They all stare in disbelief as you tootle away. You've been caught again-- disrupting the book group with inappropriate noises.) FEEDBACK.

4. I can't hear anyway.

5. Why do they cost so much?!?

What's on YOUR hate list? CI wearers feel free to chime in even though you have different issues.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Journey Into Deafness



I was probably no older than three the first time I saw someone wearing hearing aids. It was, for some reason, one of those unexplained lucid moments I remember so clearly as if it happened just recently. Even now the details are so clear I can see the colors of the walls, faces, the checker's hands ringing up items. It seems as if I was supposed to remember.

I was sitting in a shopping cart at the A&P. Mama and I had pulled up at a check-out station behind another woman and her son. I watched the checker for awhile, mama licking her stamp book, then noticed the little boy standing ahead of us quietly. He was wearing some sort of contraption with big black things over his ears. I had seen something like this in the winter--ear muffs. But it was summer and these ear things were not knitted ear muffs. They were made of metal and rubber, and had electrical wiring. I asked mama, maybe in too loud of a voice, what those things were on that boy's ears. I could tell at once I had embarrassed her. She shushed me, then explained quietly he could not hear well, so he had to wear something called hearing aids. Then she smiled apologetically to the other mother.

Right then a feeling came over me that I would someday be just like that boy. So I told my mama. She laughed and said, "No, your hearing is just fine. You will never have to wear hearing aids like him." Though I knew as she said this she was wrong, I kept it to myself. I wanted to believe her.

I think this was my first ever premonition. I've had a few others since. Always I remember them in sharp detail, just like I remember this one so vividly. It wasn't long after that I came down with the measles, though my hearing loss wasn't immediately noticeable. In fact it wasn't even diagnosed until decades later. However, the official word is the measles did my hearing in. Who knows? I could have contracted it right off that shopping cart-- or maybe not. The sickness and what came after is much more muddled in my memory.

I am not exactly sure when I first noticed the hearing loss. When you are young, you often assume others are exactly like you. Looking back I realize I had lots of problems. Ear pressure caused tremendous pain while swimming under water, or driving over mountain passes. I always had tinnitus (ringing in the ears) off and on. None of the schools I went to performed routine hearing screenings. As a teenager, I began to notice a plugged ear feeling and the tinnitus increased.

At nineteen the tinnitus got so bad I decided to see a doctor, and that was when my hearing loss was first discovered. At that time my audiogram made a cookie bite pattern in the speech ranges. My doctor suggested the hearing loss might be "allergy related." I swear most every incurable ailment was blamed on allergies back in the 70s. I pursued allergy treatments for awhile. When it became clear they didn't work, and my hearing continued to decline, I gave up. My hearing has continued to decline into what is known as a "ski-slope" loss--profound in the speech tones-- though my low frequencies are still good.

Everyone wore surgical masks in the dental office where I worked when I was in my early twenties. So I switched to a desk job, which was easier than admitting I couldn't understand people with their lips covered. Then I realized I couldn't hear on the phone well. Years went by before I conceded that I needed to do something. By this time I had a small baby, and avoided most social situations because of the hearing difficulties. I couldn't hear movies. TV Captioning hadn't been invented yet, and phone communication had become next to impossible.

Buying my first pair of hearing aids in my twenties was bittersweet. At last I could hear-- somewhat. Hearing aids are ONLY aids, they are not like glasses in that they do not provide a perfect correction. There is still a lot of distortion, missing sound and amplified sound where you do not need it. Hearing aids are more comparable to prosthetic limbs than glasses. Still, I was most amazed by my baby son's sweet cooing voice. I was hearing sounds I had never heard. That was miraculous!

Then my audiologist handed me a maintenance pamphlet with illustrations of gray-haired, seventy-year-old grandparents on the front, and I feel apart. We all know the stereotype of hearing loss as an "old person's" complaint, but until that point I tried to keep an open mind. Of course, I reasoned, if I had hearing loss, then lots of other young people must have hearing loss too. So I guess I expected more age diversity on the pamphlet. How naive of me! When I saw everyone on the front cover of that pamphlet portrayed in deep wrinkles and gray hair, that's when I realized what an anomaly I was. I cried all the way home. I didn't know one person with hearing aids. I didn't even know any people my parents age with hearing aids.

Emotionally I started crumbling and continued to crumble for the next fifteen years or so. On the outside I managed, I think, but inside I grieved. I didn't know where to turn and there wasn't much support. I felt so isolated. While my friends talked about breast-feeding, childbirth, home decorating and new jobs, I needed someone to talk with about audiologists, ear mold discomfort, parenting with hearing loss, new hearing aid technology, on the job accommodations, and a whole host of other concerns I had about my future with an incurable idiopathic progressive hearing loss. This was, after all, the early 80s. Digital hearing aids had not been invented yet. No one had even heard of cochlear implants. The Hearing Loss Association of America (HLA--formerly SHHH) was in its infancy, and full of retired grandparents who weren't parenting or working. The local chapter was far away and they usually held their meetings at inconvenient times for young people. I didn't fit in. The American Disabilities Act didn't exist yet.

To make matters worse, my hearing was declining at a rapid rate and no one knew why or how to stop it, or how bad it was going to get. Was I going to be deaf by age fifty? No one knew. Just as an example to show how out of touch most professionals were and still are, the first time I went to a psychologist to talk about the support I needed, she suggested I get a job. I look back on this and shake my head. I was grieving. I needed accommodations in order to get a job. I needed a LOT of support. The last thing I needed was someone shrugging her shoulders and telling me to go back to work.

This isn't the first time a doctor has overlooked my hearing loss. Even recently my family doctor, who has been informed numerous times, failed to recognize the impact it might have on other health issues. Just the daily stress of speech reading constantly, and filling in the blanks, guessing, and not being able to communicate effectively with 90% of the population every day, all day long---it's the little things that add up to a huge stress factor. True, she doesn't have a copy of my audiogram. I've made a note to have it sent to her, because every time I go there I have to remind the office staff I'm deaf.

Anyway it has been more than twenty years since that first ineffective series of visits to the psychologist who suggested I "get a job." I would like to take that young woman (me) by the hand to guide her through this awful mess. I wish I could go back in time and tell her it's all going to be OK. Technology is going to get better, she will discover ways to communicate on the phone and without a phone. Computers will be invented and deaf people will "talk" via videophones, email, IM, and phones with words running across a screen. TVs will all be captioned and even some movie theaters will offer it too. There will be laws that employers must accommodate us, and she will eventually get a job with accommodations that suits her. HLA will thrive and become powerful and many young people will get involved. Other support groups will pop up--the Assoc of Late-Deafened Adults (ALDA) and tons of on-line support groups. Some people still don't know where to turn. So I'm advocating. I can't go back in time, but it does me good to help others.

My deaf adventure is the main point of this blog, but since deafness doesn't define me or anyone, there will be lots of other posts in here as well-- just on life--through my eyes-- because blogging is my therapy. If you are losing your hearing or you know someone who is and you find anything in here helpful, then that's GREAT!