SHHH Position Statement on Hearing Aids for People
with Hearing Loss
Editor: SHHH recently published their "Position Statement on
Hearing Aids for People with Hearing Loss", which, as you might
expect, encourages people to be fitted with hearing aids. It also
contains some good general information on the impact of hearing loss on
people's lives. For additional information on SHHH, point your browser
to www.shhh.org. Here's the statement.
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Even though a hearing loss is one of the most common of physical and
sensory impairments, it is also perhaps the most misunderstood and
underestimated. It has been called the "invisible" condition
since it is not possible to "see" a hearing loss directly,
only its effects upon behavior and communication. The fact that these
effects can be so variable, depending upon the individual and the
situation, is what makes hearing loss such a confusing condition.
Sometimes a person with a hearing loss can fully comprehend
utterances, sometimes not at all, and sometimes only partially. This
confusion and uncertainty, often not even fully apprehended by the
person with the hearing loss, is what is responsible for the tension,
conflicts and anxieties that are often the daily fare of someone with a
hearing loss. Indeed, by diminishing a person's ability to effectively
engage in interpersonal communication, the condition has the potential
to impact every aspect of one's life, ranging from the psychosocial to
the cultural and vocational domains.
In short, it is not a condition that should be treated casually, with
haphazard, ill-advised and superficial measures taken to ameliorate its
effects. Such an approach trivializes the impact that impaired
communication can have upon the life and well being of the affected
person. Given the significance of the sense of hearing, SHHH believes
that people with hearing loss require the care of qualified
professionals who follow best professional practices.
Once the medical implications of a hearing loss have been considered
and managed, the most effective therapeutic measure is usually
appropriately selected hearing aids. At the present time, hearing aids
can be purchased by consumers from many sources, ranging from Hearing
& Speech Centers, Otologists, Audiologists, and Hearing Instrument
Specialists to mail order catalogues and Internet sites. These latter
alternative sites for obtaining hearing aids are likely to increase in
the future, particularly since many catalogues and Internet sites offer
apparently substantial discounts compared to the more traditional
sources. It is not the province or intent of SHHH to dictate to
consumers from where they should purchase hearing aids.
Rather, SHHH takes a position that no matter how or from whom a
hearing aid is obtained certain requisite conditions need to be
considered to ensure that the interests of people with hearing loss are
fully protected.
These follow:
1. It is recommended that people obtaining a hearing aid,
particularly new hearing aid users, first receive a medical evaluation
(by a primary care physician, otolaryngologist or otologist). This
provision, in accordance with current FDA regulations, can be waived by
informed adults (over the age of 18) if they so desire.
2. Every potential hearing aid candidate should receive a
comprehensive audiological evaluation, conducted by an audiologist with
the appropriate state license to practice audiology or, in states that
do not have licensing provisions, by someone who holds the requisite
professional audiological credentials.
3. A component of this audiological evaluation must be the
determination of "red-flag" observations, those that would
mandate a medical referral. These include:
a) a recent history of progressive or sudden hearing loss, tinnitus,
vertigo, otorrhea (ear drainage), otalgia (ear pain), fluctuating
hearing, aural pressure or fullness;
b) an abnormal external ear canal or tympanic membrane on otoscopy;
c) conductive hearing loss as manifested by an air-bone gap;
d) abnormal immitance measures;
e) 10 db or more asymmetry in thresholds between the two ears at two or
more frequencies; and,
f) speech perception scores much poorer or asymmetric than expected on
the basis of the pure-tone thresholds.
4. SHHH believes that the selection of a hearing aid for a specific
person is a highly individualized process, one that requires a personal
relationship between the dispenser and the consumer. It is necessary to
consider the life style and communication demands upon a consumer, in
addition to the nature of the hearing impairment, before it is possible
to make an informed decision regarding an instrument that incorporates
the necessary features and electroacoustic characteristics.
5. SHHH believes that the hearing aid selection process should
incorporate those tests and measurements that reflect current "best
professional practices." These may include various types of
objective aided and unaided speech tests, individualized electroacoustic
programming via a computer interface real-ear measures as well as
subjective self-assessment performance and handicap scales.
6. SHHH reaffirms our previous position papers that directly impact
upon the hearing aid selection process. These are:
a) Hearing Aids (including a 60-day trial period, and the desirability
of binaural aids and telecoils);
b) Hearing Assistive Technologies (their evaluation and selection); and,
c) the inclusion of a Group Hearing Aid Orientation Program into the
routine hearing aid dispensing process.
In summary, the fact that a hearing loss can have profound effects
upon people necessitates that remediation measures be conducted
personally by qualified professionals. The hearing instrument itself is
only a tool, but a sophisticated and complex one that requires
individualized fitting by trained personnel. Furthermore, because a
hearing loss can affect the psychosocial, vocational, and social-
cultural domains, rehabilitative measures are often required that
transcend the simple provision of hearing aids and/or other assistive
technologies. The selection of a hearing aid, in other words, needs to
be conceptualized as a package, one that incorporates the evaluation and
provision of other remedial measures related to the impact of a hearing
loss upon a person's life.